| Literature DB >> 29209269 |
Jeremy N Pulvers1, John D G Watson1.
Abstract
Despite the availability of thrombolytic and endovascular therapy for acute ischemic stroke, many patients are ineligible due to delayed hospital arrival. The identification of factors related to either early or delayed hospital arrival may reveal potential targets of intervention to reduce prehospital delay and improve access to time-critical thrombolysis and clot retrieval therapy. Here, we have reviewed studies reporting on factors associated with either early or delayed hospital arrival after stroke, together with an analysis of stroke onset to hospital arrival times. Much effort in the stroke treatment community has been devoted to reducing door-to-needle times with encouraging improvements. However, this review has revealed that the median onset-to-door times and the percentage of stroke patients arriving before the logistically critical 3 h have shown little improvement in the past two decades. Major factors affecting prehospital time were related to emergency medical pathways, stroke symptomatology, patient and bystander behavior, patient health characteristics, and stroke treatment awareness. Interventions addressing these factors may prove effective in reducing prehospital delay, allowing prompt diagnosis, which in turn may increase the rates and/or efficacy of acute treatments such as thrombolysis and clot retrieval therapy and thereby improve stroke outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: emergency medical services; prehospital delay; stroke; thrombolysis; tissue plasminogen activator
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209269 PMCID: PMC5701972 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Factors associated with early and delayed hospital arrival after stroke.
| Factors associated with early presentation |
|---|
| Emergency Medical Services admission (40) ( |
| Severe stroke (NIHSS and equivalent) (26) ( |
| Hemorrhagic stroke (10) ( |
| Consciousness: lowered, disturbed, lost (9) ( |
| History of stroke or TIA (7) ( |
| History of atrial fibrillation, cardiac arrhythmia (7) ( |
| Attributing symptoms to stroke (7) ( |
| CAD, IHD, prior myocardial infarction (6) ( |
| Perception of severity, urgency (6) ( |
| Speech disturbance, aphasia (6) ( |
| 911 (or equivalent) called first or early (6) ( |
| Bystander response (5) ( |
| Not living alone (4) ( |
| Higher education level (4) ( |
| TIA (4) ( |
| Increasing disability (4) ( |
| Daytime onset (4) ( |
| Sudden onset of symptoms (3) ( |
| Reduced GCS (3) ( |
| Knowledge of thrombolysis (3) ( |
| Cardioembolic stroke (3) ( |
| Motor impairment (3) ( |
| White race/ethnicity (USA) (3) ( |
| Directly reaching hospital (3) ( |
| Primary care facility (GP) visited first (14) ( |
| Referral from other hospital (10) ( |
| Living alone (9) ( |
| Stroke in the evening or night (8) ( |
| Diabetes mellitus (7) ( |
| Private transport to hospital (6) ( |
| Black race/ethnicity (USA, UK) (5) ( |
| Lacunar stroke, small vessel stroke (5) ( |
| Mild neurological symptoms (5) ( |
| Symptoms not taken seriously, low threat perception (4) ( |
| Awakening with symptoms (3) ( |
| Symptom onset at home (3) ( |
| Regular drinker, history of alcohol abuse (3) ( |
| Worsening symptoms compared to onset (3) ( |
Factors significantly associated (.
The first number in parentheses indicates the number of studies canvassing each factor, followed by the references.
NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; TIA, transient ischemic attack; CAD, coronary artery disease; IHD, ischemic heart disease; GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale; GP, general practitioner.
Figure 1Median onset-to-door times after stroke and percentages of patients arriving to hospital after stroke at 1, 2, 3, 6, and 24 h. (A) Data points represent median onset-to-door times (hours) of stroke patients plotted against the year/s of data acquisition, in studies of factors associated with hospital arrival times after stroke, from 58 studies. For studies conducted over multiple years, the mean of the years was taken (8). Black line shows the local polynomial regression (LOESS), and the horizontal gray line indicates 3 h. (B) Median onset-to-door times (hours) from two studies that reported data for multiple years, from the United States (USA) (54) and Greece (59). Black lines connect data from the same study. (C) Subset of median onset-to-door time data in panel (A) showing studies from the United States (31–33, 35, 36, 44, 48, 53, 54, 73), excluding one outlier of median 16 h in 2000–2001 (128). (D) The cumulative percentages of patients arriving to hospital after stroke, at 1, 2, 3, 6, and 24 h after onset. Data points represent percentages from individual studies plotted against year/s of data acquisition. Black line shows the local polynomial regression (LOESS). An improvement in prehospital delay over the years would manifest as an upwards curve within each box, which is not seen. (E) Subset of the cumulative percentage of patients arriving before 2 h from studies that reported on data for multiple years from Italy [1986–1990 to 1991–1995 (71); 2004–2012 (83)] and the United States [2001–2004 (54), 2003–2009 (62)].