1. A Randomized Trial of Recombinant Staphylokinase Versus Alteplase for Coronary Artery Patency in Acute Myocardial Infarction
- Author
-
Steven Vanderschueren, Laurentino Barrios, Pitsanu Kerdsinchai, Paul Van den Heuvel, Luc Hermans, Mathias Vrolix, Filip De Man, Edouard Benit, Luc Muyldermans, Désiré Collen, and Frans Van de Werf
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aspirin ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Staphylokinase ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,Tissue plasminogen activator ,Physiology (medical) ,Angioplasty ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Fibrinolytic agent ,TIMI ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Recombinant staphylokinase (STAR) was shown recently to offer promise for coronary arterial thrombolysis in patients with evolving myocardial infarction. The present multicenter randomized open trial was designed to assess the thrombolytic efficacy, safety, and fibrin specificity of STAR relative to accelerated alteplase (recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator [RTPA]). Methods and Results One hundred patients with evolving myocardial infarction of P Conclusions STAR appears to be at least as effective for early coronary recanalization as and significantly more fibrin-specific than accelerated RTPA in patients with evolving myocardial infarction.
- Published
- 1995