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Postgraduate Medical Journal 2009;85:331-334; doi:10.1136/hrt.2007.137182
© 2009 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine.

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The pharmaco-invasive approach to STEMI: when should fibrinolytic-treated patients go to the "cath lab"?

J J Edmond1, C P Juergens2, J K French2

1 Department of Cardiology, Bristol Royal Infirmary, Bristol, UK
2 Department of Cardiology, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, Australia

Correspondence to:
Professor J K French, Department of Cardiology, Liverpool Hospital, Elizabeth St, Liverpool, NSW 2170, Australia; j.french{at}unsw.edu.au

Although primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in clinical trials has lower rates of reinfarction, stroke and mortality than fibrinolytic therapy, because of system delays in routine practice, field triage and prehospital administration of fibrinolytic therapy may lead to similar clinical outcomes, especially in those patients who present in the first 2 h after symptom onset. Necessary for these outcomes is the liberal use of both rescue PCI and in-hospital revascularisation. Non-invasive prediction of failed reperfusion may be enhanced by the use of ST recovery, patient characteristics and troponin T levels, measured by point-of-care assays. This review focuses on the timing of, and indications for, an invasive strategy after fibrinolytic therapy, including that for failed pharmacological reperfusion.


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treatment options should be extended to MI patients with old LBBB
oscar,m jolobe
Postgrad Med J Online, 29 Jun 2009 [Full text]

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