Abstract WP104: Clinical Characteristics of Stroke Mimics Treated on an Urban Mobile Stroke Unit

Autor: Glenn Asaeda, Robert S Crupi, Xian Wu, Randolph S. Marshall, Saad Mir, Elizabeth S Efraim, Jeffrey Bokser, Michael P Lerario, Iván Díaz, Natalie Cheng, Hooman Kamel, Babak B. Navi, Josef D. Schenker, Matthew E. Fink, Joshua Z. Willey, Sarah K Rostanski, Benjamin R Kummer, Sammy Pishanidar
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: Stroke. 50
ISSN: 1524-4628
0039-2499
Popis: Introduction: It is unknown how the clinical characteristics of stroke mimics treated on Mobile Stroke Units (MSUs) compare to confirmed acute strokes treated on these units. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed all patients transported by the NewYork-Presbyterian MSU in New York City from October 2016-May 2018. A vascular neurologist assigned a final diagnosis after comprehensive medical record review. Clinical data were abstracted, including comorbidities, presenting symptoms, stroke severity, acute treatments, and short-term outcomes. We compared characteristics of patients with a stroke mimic diagnosis versus those with acute ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke using targeted minimum loss-based estimation to adjust for demographics, comorbidities, NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, and intravenous tPA administration. Results: Among 92 suspected stroke patients transported by MSU, 56 (61%) had confirmed acute stroke (77% ischemic, 23% hemorrhagic) and 36 (39%) had a stroke mimic. Mimics consisted of seizure (n=8), metabolic encephalopathy (n=6), somatoform disorders (n=4), and others (n=18). The mean NIHSS score was 8 (SD 7) among mimics versus 11 (SD 8) among confirmed strokes (p=0.14). The top presenting symptoms among mimics were unilateral weakness (n=8), aphasia (n=6), confusion (n=6), and decreased consciousness (n=6). Nine mimics (25%) received tPA and none had hemorrhagic conversion; while 30 (53%) confirmed strokes received tPA and 2 (7%) had hemorrhagic conversion. There was no difference in MSU arrival-to-tPA time between groups (46 vs. 44 minutes, p=0.70). In multivariable analyses, compared to patients with confirmed stroke, mimics had significantly lower NIHSS scores, higher initial blood pressures, and shorter lengths-of-stay. Rates of death and discharge disposition were similar between groups. Conclusions: Among patients transported by a MSU for suspected stroke, two-fifths were stroke mimics. Seizure, metabolic encephalopathy, and somatoform disorders were the most common mimic diagnoses. Patients with stroke mimics had lower NIHSS scores and less often were treated with tPA.
Databáze: OpenAIRE