| Literature DB >> 32722432 |
Moritz Kielkopf1, Thomas Meinel1, Johannes Kaesmacher2, Urs Fischer1, Marcel Arnold1, Mirjam Heldner1, David Seiffge1, Pasquale Mordasini3, Tomas Dobrocky3, Eike Piechowiak3, Jan Gralla3, Simon Jung1.
Abstract
(1) Background: The benefit of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) treatment declines with any time delay until treatment. Hence, factors influencing the time from symptom onset to admission (TTA) are of utmost importance. This study aimed to assess temporal trends and risk factors for delays in TTA. (2)Entities:
Keywords: prehospital delay; prior stroke; stroke; time to admission
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722432 PMCID: PMC7464858 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9082376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Inclusion Criteria in the main analysis.
Figure 2Prehospital delay time of patients with acute cerebrovascular event in hours.
Comparison of adj. TTA and adj. referral pathways in acute stroke 2018 with 2006.
| 2018 | 2006 | |
|---|---|---|
| EMS referral | 51% (1063/2088) | 17% (105/615) |
| GP referral * | 7% (151/2088) | 38% (233/615) |
| Self-referral | 11% (222/2088 | 12% (46/615) |
| Inter-hospital referral | 31% (651/2088) | 38% (231/615) |
| Median TTA | 132 min | 180 min |
| EMS referral | | |
| GP ** (Median TTA) | 207 min | 224 min |
| SR (Median TTA) | 140 min | 174 min |
| Inter-hospital (Median TTA) | 209 Min | 195 min |
The data from 2006 are the results of a previous study analyzing the time to admission in AIS, conducted within the same stroke network. * The data of 2006 include 64/233 patients referred by so-called Emergency doctors (ED), a system of familiar physicians who take regular terms in an emergency service outside the hospital. ** In 2006 only patients with direct GP-referral (n = 169) are considered for exact delay comparison (ED referrals excluded). SR, self-referral; GP, general practitioner; EMS, emergency medical services; TTA, time to hospital admission.
Baseline characteristics of patients according to time from symptom onset to hospital admission.
| n | Hospital Arrival within 96 min | Hospital Arrival after 96 min | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (IQR/median) | 1244 | 62.27–82/73.45 | 57.58–82.1/73.15 | 0.113 |
| Men (number, %) | 1244 | 352/622 (56.6%) | 351/622 (56.4%) | 0.954 |
| Referral (number, %) | 1244 | | | 0.000 † |
| Type of event (number, %) | 1244 | | | 0.002 † |
| Daytime (number, %) | 1244 | 488/622 (78.5%) | 463/622 (74.4%) | 0.109 |
| PS-Disability mRS (number, %) | 946 | | | 0.975 |
| Medical History (number, %) | 141/622 (22.7%) | 161/621 (25.9%) | 0.181 | |
| Living situation–at home (number, %) | 1240 | 589/620 (95%) | 581/620 (93.7%) | 0.325 |
| NIHSS (IQR/median) | 1186 | 2–13/5, n = 609 | 1–8/3, n = 577 | 0.000 † |
| Blood pressure systolic (mmHg) (IQR/median) | 1231 | 140–177/160, n = 615 | 135–175/155, n = 616 | 0.032 |
Others, retinal infarct, amaurosis fugax, sinus vein thrombosis and stroke mimics; mRS, modified Rankin Scale; PS, Pre stroke; PCVE, Previous cerebrovascular event; RF, risk factor; NIHSS score, National Institute of Health Stroke Scale; Daytime, Daytime from 7 a.m.–7 p.m.
Factors associated with time to admission (linear regression analysis).
| Variable | Beta | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | 16.5 | −7.0–40.0 | 0.169 |
| Age | −0.2 | −1.0–0.6 | 0.589 |
| Diabetes Mellitus | 12.5 | −19.4–44.5 | 0.442 |
| General Practitioner | 139.7 | 100.3–179.2 | 0.000 † |
| Self-Referral | 92.1 | 56.6–127.5 | 0.000 † |
| Daytime | −57.5 | −85.0–(−29.9) | 0.000 † |
| PCVE | 1.4 | −26.0–28.7 | 0.921 |
| NIHSS score to admission | −1.9 | −3.6–(−0.2) | 0.028 † |
| Blood pressure systolic | 0.17 | −0.3–0.6 | 0.434 |
† Statistically significant. Beta, Regression coefficient in its influence in mins. on TTA; Daytime, Daytime from 7 a.m.–7 p.m. ; PCVE, Previous cerebrovascular event ; NIHSS score, National Institute of Health Stroke Scale.