Comparison by controlled clinical trial of streptokinase and heparin in treatment of life-threatening pulmonary embolism

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Abstract

Treatment with heparin or streptokinase was allocated randomly to 30 patients with life-threatening pulmonary embolism verified by angiography. Treatment was given for 72 hours and pulmonary angiography was repeated. There was significandy greater (P < 0.001) evidence of thrombolysis in those patients treated with streptokinase compared with those treated with heparin. The reduction of systolic and mean pulmonary arterial pressures was also significantly greater (P < 0.05 and P < 0.02 respectively) in the streptokinase group. Seven patients failed to complete 72 hours of the trial treatment: five successfully underwent pulmonary embolectomy. Six of these “failures” had initial pulmonary angiographic scores of 24 or more and systemic systolic blood pressure recordings of 100 mm Hg or less. Patients with these features should probably be considered for pulmonary embolectomy as the initial treatment. A febrile reaction commonly occurred in the streptokinase group; otherwise side effects were no more common than in the heparin group. © 1974, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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APA

Tibbutt, D. A., Lee, G. D. J., Sharp, A. A., Davies, J. A., Holt, T. M., Fletcher, E. W. L., … Anderson, J. A. (1974). Comparison by controlled clinical trial of streptokinase and heparin in treatment of life-threatening pulmonary embolism. British Medical Journal, 1(5904), 343–347. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.1.5904.343

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