Cerebellar stroke complicating coronary catheterization: A case report

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Abstract

Cerebrovascular events are rare but devastating events that can complicate any coronary intervention. In the vast majority of cases, they involve major cerebral arteries. We report the case of a 56-year-old woman admitted for unstable angina associated with severe left systolic dysfunction. She developed moderate cerebellar stroke while undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention, with a national institutes of health stroke scale score of 5. Immediate systemic thrombolysis was performed, but her neurological status deteriorated. A large hemorrhagic transformation was then diagnosed, and she died despite surgical intervention. Periprocedural strokes are marred with high morbidity and mortality, therefore preventionis key, as many risk factors can be controlled or mitigated. Our patient presented many of these factors; they can be procedure-related (transfemoral approach, anticoagulation) or patient-related (age, diabetes mellitus, uncontrolled hypertension, diffuse atherosclerosis).

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Chraibi, H., Yousfi, Z. E., Mouine, N., Lakhal, Z., & Benyass, A. (2021). Cerebellar stroke complicating coronary catheterization: A case report. Pan African Medical Journal, 40. https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2021.40.172.32031

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