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PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To provide the latest updates in the diagnosis, management, and prognosis in patients with basilar artery occlusion (BAO). RECENT FINDINGS: The diagnosis of BAO requires a high index of suspicion among patients with sudden onset depressed level of consciousness, quadraparesis (or hemiparesis), and cranial nerve dysfunction. Computed topography with angiography is currently the diagnostic modality of choice for the diagnosis of BAO. Given the often catastrophic nature of BAO, intravenous thrombolysis combined with mechanical thrombectomy should be offered in eligible patients. Despite a lack of data from randomized clinical trials, good outcomes are possible, especially in patients without early evidence of infarction. Aggressive treatment with intravenous thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy should be considered in eligible patients with BAO, but there remains a dearth of information from randomized clinical trials.
RESUMO
Depot medications have been used for long-term treatment of many different medical conditions (schizophrenia, opioid addiction) and for prevention of pregnancy (birth control). In addition, proposals for depot medication for antidepressants have been made as a possible treatment for chronic depression. For the treatment of chronic epilepsy, there are currently no depot antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). However, there may be a role for them. Depot AEDs could improve medication adherence rates, thereby reducing the morbidity and mortality that are associated with ongoing seizures. This could help to reduce hospital costs for people with epilepsy. Potential patient populations that could benefit from a depot AED include patients with forgetfulness, socioeconomic barriers to access of daily oral medications, impaired gastric absorption or dysphagia, comorbid epilepsy and psychiatric disease, and personal preference to avoid the inconvenience of taking a medication daily or even multiple times per day. In this article, we review reasons to create a depot AED and the outcomes of doing so in the context of the pillars of bioethics: beneficence (to act in a patient's best interest), autonomy (to respect a patient as an individual and honor their preferences), nonmaleficence (to do no harm), and justice (to treat all persons fairly and equally).