UMEM Educational Pearls

A retrospective, single Australian center review of 300 patients who had blunt cerebral vascular injuries found:

-9.8% had an inpatient CVA

-Most occurred in first 72 hours

-Those receiving no anti coagulation or antiplatelets had 28% CVA incidence. 
-Those treated had a 3.6% CVA incidence (anti platelets were better than anti coagulation)

-Carotid artery injury was less common than vertebral artery but had higher frequency of CVA

-associated factors: low GCS, rib fractures, severe trauma 

Take away: non-treatment of blunt cerebral vascular injuries had higher inpatient stroke risk. Antiplatelet agents such as aspirin and Clopidogrel performed better than anticoagulants

References

Stanislaus V, Zhang WW, Chen Z, et al. Inpatient stroke outcomes in patients with blunt cerebrovascular injuries according to risk factors and treatment. Trauma. 2025;0(0). doi:10.1177/14604086251333569