Outcome of Delayed Administration of Alteplase in a Resource-Poor Area: A Case Report

Cureus. 2022 Jun 16;14(6):e25996. doi: 10.7759/cureus.25996. eCollection 2022 Jun.

Abstract

An acute ischemic stroke, though carrying the risk of debilitating complications, is a preventable and treatable disease. Thrombolysis and endovascular thrombectomy are important components of its management. However, various challenges in resource-poor countries like Nigeria and other developing nations pose a great limitation in the timely intervention of ischemic stroke treatment. The challenges include late presentation, poor awareness of stroke symptoms even among health care workers, poor ambulance service/transportation network, intra-hospital delay, particularly in neuroimaging, and the unavailability of tissue plasminogen activator (alteplase/tenecteplase). We report a 32-year-old African man with an antecedent history of suspected migraine headaches with aura and a family history of hypertension and stroke, admitted 7½ hours after onset of stroke symptoms, scoring 13 on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) with Medical Research Council (MRC) muscle power grades 1 and 3 on the right upper and lower extremities, respectively. Urgent non-contrast brain CT revealed only a hyperdense sign in the left middle cerebral artery (MCA). Intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) was administered at a lower dose of 0.6 mg/kg, 15½ hours after symptom onset, and a CT angiogram done 24 hours post-thrombolysis showed partial recanalization of the M1 segment of the MCA and intermediate collateral supply (Alberta stroke program early CT {ASPECT} score: 6). By the third day of admission, he had made a significant clinical improvement and was discharged home able to walk unsupported on the fourth day.

Keywords: antiplatelets; ischemic stroke; nigeria; resource-poor setting; thrombolytic.

Publication types

  • Case Reports