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Malignant middle cerebral artery syndrome and decompressive hemicraniectomy after ischaemic stroke.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Malignant middle cerebral artery (MCA) syndrome is one of the most devastating stroke syndromes, occurring in approximately 10% of ischaemic strokes and resulting in high morbidity and mortality (up to 80% if untreated). These outcomes reflect the large volume of infarction and consequent oedema and raised intracranial pressure resulting from a large vessel occlusion. Pharmacological treatment of this syndrome has limited efficacy and surgical management with decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC) is the mainstay to reduce mortality. Decisions regarding such neurosurgical interventions are nuanced and require a multidisciplinary approach. This review considers the pathophysiology and natural history of malignant MCA stroke, the indications for DHC, technical considerations of craniectomy and cranioplasty, and the importance of clear communication in shared decision-making with patients, families and across specialities.

Description

Journal Title

Pract Neurol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1474-7758
1474-7766

Volume Title

Publisher

BMJ

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Stroke Association (SA SCL MED 22\100006)
Stroke Association; National Institute of Health and Social Care Research (NIHR)