| Literature DB >> 27619651 |
Karen Chen1, Andrea L C Schneider1, Rafael H Llinas1, Elisabeth B Marsh2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dizziness is a common chief complaint of patients presenting to the Emergency Department (ED). Physicians must quickly and accurately identify patients whose etiology is most likely ischemia. Additional tools are available, but often require further training (vestibular testing) or are costly and not always readily available (magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)). This study evaluates the ability of a routine history and simple physical examination to correctly identify dizzy patients with posterior circulation ischemia, and the added utility of CT angiography (CTA).Entities:
Keywords: CT angiogram; Dizziness; Stroke; Triage
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27619651 PMCID: PMC5020437 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-016-0101-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Patient characteristics. Univariate analysis for the cohort stratified by posterior circulation TIA/stroke status
| Variable | Total cohort | Non-stroke | Posterior circulation TIA/Stroke |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean years (SD)) | 56 (19) | 55 (19) | 67 (15) | <0.0001 |
| Sex (n (% male)) | 508 (42 %) | 453 (41 %) | 55 (55 %) | 0.005 |
| Race (n (% black)) | 374 (31 %) | 351 (31 %) | 23 (23 %) | 0.079 |
| Systolic blood pressure (mean mmHg (SD)) | 137 (26) | 135 (25) | 161 (26) | <0.0001 |
| Vascular Risk Factors (n (%)) | ||||
| Coronary artery disease | 198 (16 %) | 178 (16 %) | 20 (20 %) | 0.293 |
| Diabetes | 318 (26 %) | 284 (25 %) | 34 (34 %) | 0.062 |
| Hypertension | 769 (63 %) | 691 (62 %) | 78 (78 %) | 0.001 |
| Hyperlipidemia | 495 (41 %) | 440 (39 %) | 55 (55 %) | 0.002 |
| History of smoking | 608 (49 %) | 545 (49 %) | 63 (63 %) | 0.004 |
| Neurologic Deficits (n (%)) | ||||
| Dysarthria | 56 (5 %) | 14 (1 %) | 42 (42 %) | <0.0001 |
| Diplopia | 108 (9 %) | 91 (8 %) | 17 (17 %) | 0.624 |
| Facial droop | 56 (5 %) | 11 (<1 %) | 56 (56 %) | <0.0001 |
| Unilateral symptomsa | 126 (10 %) | 56 (5 %) | 70 (70 %) | <0.0001 |
aone-sided motor weakness or sensory abnormality
Multivariable model of factors associated with ischemia
| Variable | Odds ratio | 95 % Confidence interval |
|---|---|---|
| Age (per 10 years) | 1.3 | 1.1–1.5 |
| Sex (male) | 1.5 | 0.9–2.6 |
| Race (black) | 0.8 | 0.4–1.4 |
| Systolic Blood Pressure (per 10 mmHg) | 1.3 | 1.1–1.4 |
| Presence of vascular risk factor | 1.2 | 0.4–3.7 |
| Presence of focal deficit | 28.7 | 16.0–51.4 |
Univariate analysis for those undergoing CTA
| Variable | Non-stroke | Posterior circulation TIA/Stroke |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean years (SD)) | 61 (16) | 65 (15) | 0.178 |
| Sex (n (% male)) | 16 (44 %) | 34 (67 %) | 0.039 |
| Race (n (% black)) | 4 (11 %) | 11 (22 %) | 0.203 |
| Systolic blood pressure (mean mmHg (SD)) | 149 (24) | 158 (22) | 0.093 |
| Vascular Risk Factors (n (%)) | |||
| Coronary artery disease | 6 (17 %) | 12 (24 %) | 0.436 |
| Diabetes | 8 (22 %) | 15 (29 %) | 0.454 |
| Hypertension | 24 (67 %) | 35 (69 %) | 0.847 |
| Hyperlipidemia | 17 (47 %) | 28 (55 %) | 0.480 |
| History of smoking | 28 (50 %) | 32 (63 %) | 0.371 |
| Neurologic Deficits (n (%)) | |||
| Dysarthria | 2 (5 %) | 21 (41 %) | <0.0001 |
| Diplopia | 8 (22 %) | 10 (20 %) | 0.665 |
| Facial droop | 0 (<1 %) | 23 (45 %) | <0.0001 |
| Unilateral symptomsa | 8 (22 %) | 34 (67 %) | <0.0001 |
| Any calcium on CTA (n) | 24 (67 %) | 36 (71 %) | 0.697 |
| Specific distribution of calcium on CTA (n) | |||
| Proximal vertebral artery | 5 (14 %) | 8 (16 %) | 0.817 |
| Distal vertebral artery | 2 (6 %) | 5 (10 %) | 0.473 |
| Basilar artery | 0 (<1 %) | 3 (6 %) | 0.139 |
| Proximal carotid artery | 14 (39 %) | 25 (49 %) | 0.349 |
| Distal carotid artery | 10 (28 %) | 30 (59 %) | 0.004 |
| Aortic arch | 15 (42 %) | 26 (51 %) | 0.391 |
aone-sided motor weakness or sensory abnormality
Fig. 1The model was no better at identifying posterior circulation ischemia (identical AUC) when CTA findings were added