Cerebral arterial spasm--a controlled trial of nimodipine in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage

Author(s): Allen GS, Ahn HS, Preziosi TJ, Battye R, Boone SC, et al.

Abstract

We enrolled 125 neurologically normal patients with intracranial aneurysms in a multi-institution, prospective, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial within 96 hours of their subarachnoid hemorrhage, to determine whether treatment with the calcium blocker nimodipine would prevent or reduce the severity of ischemic neurologic deficits from arterial spasm. A deficit from cerebral arterial spasm that persisted and was severe or caused death by the end of the 21-day treatment period occurred in 8 of 60 patients given placebo and in 1 of 56 given nimodipine (P = 0.03, Fisher's exact test). Analysis of the amount of basal subarachnoid blood on pre-entry CAT scans in patients with deficits from spasm showed that an increase in subarachnoid blood was not associated with a worse neurologic outcome among patients who received nimodipine, unlike the situation in patients given a placebo. There were no side effects from nimodipine. We conclude that nimodipine should be given to patients who are neurologically normal after subarachnoid hemorrhage in order to reduce the occurrence of severe neurologic deficits due to cerebral arterial spasm.

Similar Articles

Early identification of refractory epilepsy

Author(s): Kwan P, Brodie MJ

Curing epilepsy: progress and future directions

Author(s): Jacobs MP, Leblanc GG, Brooks-Kayal A, Jensen FE, Lowenstein DH, et al.

The clinical impact of pharmacogenetics on the treatment of epilepsy

Author(s): Löscher W, Klotz U, Zimprich F, Schmidt D

Overexpression of multiple drug resistance genes in endothelial cells from patients with refractory epilepsy

Author(s): Dombrowski SM, Desai SY, Marroni M, Cucullo L, Goodrich K, et al.

Interaction of antiepileptic drugs with human P-glycoprotein in vitro

Author(s): Weiss J, Kerpen CJ, Lindenmaier H, Dormann SM, Haefeli WE

The importance of drug interactions in epilepsy therapy

Author(s): Patsalos PN, Fröscher W, Pisani F, van Rijn CM

Nimodipine in refractory epilepsy: a placebo-controlled, add-on study

Author(s): Larkin JG, McKee PJ, Blacklaw J, Thompson GG, Morgan IC, et al.

Mechanisms of drug resistance

Author(s): Löscher W

The clinical impact of pharmacogenetics on the treatment of epilepsy

Author(s): Löscher W, Klotz U, Zimprich F, Schmidt D

Nimodipine as an add-on therapy for intractable epilepsy

Author(s): Meyer FB, Cascino GD, Whisnant JP, Sharbrough FW, Ivnik RJ, et al.