Literature DB >> 32753143

Telestroke in the Time of COVID-19: The Mayo Clinic Experience.

Josephine F Huang1, Melanie R F Greenway2, Deena M Nasr3, Felix E Chukwudelunzu4, Bart M Demaerschalk5, Cumara B O'Carroll6, Charisse A Nord7, Emily A Pahl7, Kevin M Barrett2, Lindsy N Williams2.   

Abstract

On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) a pandemic, and in the weeks following, public health organizations, medical associations, and governing bodies throughout the world recommended limiting contact with others to "flatten the curve" of COVID-19. Although both ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes have been reported with COVID-19, there has been anecdotal suggestion of an overall decrease in stroke admissions. To date, the effects of any pandemic on telestroke service lines have not been described. The purpose of this cross-sectional analysis of telestroke activations in the 30 days before and after the declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic is to describe the difference in case volumes of telestroke activations, the characteristics of patients, and treatment recommendations between the 2 time frames. We found a 50.0% reduction in total telestroke activations between the predeclaration group (142 patients) and the postdeclaration group (71 patients). There were no statistically significant differences in age (P=.95), sex (P=.10), diagnosis (P=.26), or regional variations (P=.08) in activation volumes. The percentage of patients for whom we recommended urgent stroke treatment with intravenous alteplase, mechanical thrombectomy, or both decreased from 44.4% (28 of 63) to 33.3% (11 of 33). The reasons for the sunstantial decrease in telestroke activations and urgent stroke treatment recommendations are likely multifactorial but nevertheless underscore the importance of continued public health measures to encourage patients and families to seek emergency medical care at the time of symptom onset.
Copyright © 2020 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32753143      PMCID: PMC7293444          DOI: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2020.06.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc        ISSN: 0025-6196            Impact factor:   7.616


The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) a pandemic on March 11, 2020. The ultimate magnitude of impact from COVID-19 has yet to be seen in the United States. Neurologic manifestations of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) have been reported in 36.4% of the Wuhan cohort of patients with COVID-19, with ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke occurring in 5.7% of patients. Anecdotally, the volumes of stroke admissions in some communities in the United States have recently decreased. Prior studies during epidemics such as the Middle East respiratory syndrome epidemic have documented decreased emergency department (ED) utilization collectively. , This finding brings into question whether patients may feel dissuaded from presenting to the hospital with mild or rapidly resolving symptoms—a situation that could be reflective of patients’ anxieties during this daunting time. With this scenario, we would anticipate that the volume of patients with stroke who have more severe deficits would still remain stable. However, Zhao et al reported a 50% reduction in thrombectomies in Shanghai in the first month after the Spring Festival when compared with the same time period in 2019. Whether this decline reflects a reduction in patient volume, decreased eligibility due to delayed presentation, reluctance to perform a procedure that could potentially result in contamination or exposure, unavailability of specialized staff who may be ill or redeployed to another specialty, or simply the lack of resources or hospital capacity to carry out the procedures is unknown. Because of the relatively new technology offered through current telestroke practices, the effects of a global pandemic on a telestroke service line have yet to be described. We aimed to analyze the patterns of our telestroke population in the 30 days preceding the WHO declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 11, 2020, compared with the 30 days following this declaration through a retrospective review of all telestroke activations from February 10, 2020, until April 9, 2020, at our 27 Mayo Clinic–affiliated telestroke spoke hospitals.

Methods

We retrospectively reviewed data collected for ED telestroke activations for 30 days before the pandemic declaration (February 10 to March 10, 2020) and 30 days after the declaration (March 11 to April 9, 2020) from the Mayo Clinic telestroke network. This telestroke network provides 24-hour synchronous audio-video telestroke service to 27 hospitals located in Arizona, Florida, Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin and is activated when an ED physician or advanced practice practitioner recognizes patients presenting with acute stroke symptoms and signs who may be amenable to urgent stroke treatment. Data reviewed included patient age, sex, telestroke service location, time of symptom onset or last known normal, time of telestroke activation, diagnoses, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, and recommendations for treatment with intravenous tissue plasminogen activator (IV-tPA) and/or endovascular thrombectomy. Telestroke activation criteria for our institution are (1) presence of any persistent focal neurologic deficits presenting within 6 hours of stroke onset or last known normal or (2) persistent neurologic deficits in patients with an NIHSS score of 6 or greater presenting within 6 to 24 hours from stroke onset or last known normal time. Continuous variables are reported as mean ± SD. Continuous variables were compared using a Student t test. Categorical variables are repor ted as number and percentage and compared using a χ2 test. All analyses were performed using JMP Pro statistical software, version 14.1 (SAS Institute).

Results

There were 142 stroke activations in the pre–pandemic declaration period and 71 in the post–pandemic declaration period—a 50.0% reduction in volume. The average number of telestroke activations per day decreased from 4.7 to 2.4. The number of patients in whom a telestroke video visit was completed with stroke as the final diagnosis decreased by 50.8%, from 65 to 33. There were no differences in age, sex, diagnosis, or regional variation in volume (Table 1 ).
Table 1

Patient Demographic Characteristics and Volumesa,b

VariableBefore pandemic declarationAfter pandemic declarationP value
Total cases14271NA
Age (y)67.6±12.367.7±15.1.95
Female sex77 (54.2)30 (42.3).10
Primary diagnosis.26
 TIA13 (9.2)8 (11.3)
 Ischemic stroke63 (44.4)33 (46.5)
 Intracranial hemorrhage2 (1.4)4 (5.6)
 Stroke mimic64 (45.1)26 (36.6)
Telestroke region.08
 Arizona14 (9.9)9 (12.7)
 Florida45 (31.7)32 (45.1)
 Midwest region83 (58.5)30 (42.3)

NA = not applicable; TIA = transient ischemic attack.

Data are presented as mean ± SD or No. (percentage) of patients.

Patient Demographic Characteristics and Volumesa,b NA = not applicable; TIA = transient ischemic attack. Data are presented as mean ± SD or No. (percentage) of patients. Table 2 summarizes the clinical variables in patients with diagnosis of ischemic stroke only. Although the proportion of ischemic stroke diagnosis volumes was similar before and after the pandemic declaration, the last known normal/symptom onset time to telestroke activation in the ED was significantly shorter (6.8 hours vs 4.2 hours, P=.04) for the post–pandemic declaration group (Figure ). Recommendation for acute stroke intervention (IV-tPA and/or thrombectomy) occurred at a lower rate for our post–pandemic declaration group, despite the findings of similar stroke severity in the 2 groups. Notably, however, all patients who did not receive urgent stroke treatment in the post–pandemic declaration group had an NIHSS score of 6 or less, with the majority of patients having an NIHSS score of 3 or less (21 of 24 [87.5%]).
Table 2

Clinical Variables for Ischemic Strokesa,b

VariableBefore pandemic declarationAfter pandemic declarationP value
Total ischemic stroke63 (44.4)33 (46.5)NA
Last known normal (h)6.8±7.34.2±4.7.04
NIHSS score6.9±7.04.8±5.5.10
Severity (NIHSS score).18
 Mild (≤4)31 (49.2)21 (63.6)
 Moderate to severe (>4)32 (50.8)12 (36.4)
Treatment.29
 No treatment35 (56.6)22 (66.7)
 Treatment28 (44.4)11 (33.3)
Treatment type.16
 tPA only17 (27.0)3 (9.1)
 Endovascular only6 (9.5)4 (12.1)
 tPA + endovascular4 (6.4)4 (12.1)
 None36 (57.1)22 (66.7)

NA = not applicable; NIHSS = National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; tPA = tissue plasminogen activator.

Data are presented as No. (percentage) of patients or mean ± SD.

Figure

Last known normal time to telestroke activation. Horizontal lines within boxes indicate medians, and top and bottom borders of boxes indicate 75% and 25% quantiles. The whiskers above and below the boxes represent 1.5 times the interquartile range. Points beyond the whiskers are outliers 1 = pre–pandemic declaration group (February 10, 2020, until March 10, 2020); 2 = post–pandemic declaration group (March 11, 2020, until April 9, 2020).

Clinical Variables for Ischemic Strokesa,b NA = not applicable; NIHSS = National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; tPA = tissue plasminogen activator. Data are presented as No. (percentage) of patients or mean ± SD. Last known normal time to telestroke activation. Horizontal lines within boxes indicate medians, and top and bottom borders of boxes indicate 75% and 25% quantiles. The whiskers above and below the boxes represent 1.5 times the interquartile range. Points beyond the whiskers are outliers 1 = pre–pandemic declaration group (February 10, 2020, until March 10, 2020); 2 = post–pandemic declaration group (March 11, 2020, until April 9, 2020).

Discussion

Anecdotally from stroke centers internationally, overall stroke volumes appear to have decreased. Several questions regarding this phenomenon include (1) if the true incidence of stroke has decreased, (2) if patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack are staying home due to COVID-19 exposure concern, (3) if patients are presenting too late for urgent therapies and thus staying at their local hospital without telestroke activation or being transferred to a stroke center, (4) if decreased travel for medical appointments result in fewer stroke admissions, and (5) if fewer patients with stroke mimics are presenting to the ED. This retrospective review describes the telestroke activation patterns of the Mayo Clinic telestroke network in the 30 days preceding the declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 30 days following the declaration. There was a notable reduction in average telestroke utilization from 4.7 to 2.4 activations per day, which was observed across all geographic regions of the telestroke network. The observed decrease in volumes at our spoke sites argues against a phenomenon that could be attributed to reluctance of community hospitals to refer to tertiary referral centers or decreased acceptance of patients from the receiving tertiary centers. However, it remains unclear if the overall reduction in volume of telestroke activations was due to a reduced incidence of stroke, patient-related factors, or a reduction in utilization by ED physicians. It is notable that similar reductions in volume have been seen for percutaneous coronary interventions in the setting of ST-elevation myocardial infarction in the United States as well as reports from Spain. , We found that the median time from reported symptom onset or last known normal time to telestroke activation was decreased in the post–pandemic declaration group compared with the pre–pandemic declaration group. This finding could potentially be explained by local stay-at-home orders that resulted in more strokes witnessed at home by family members, resulting in earlier presentation to the ED. Potentially, an overall decreased ED utilization for all medical conditions could also contribute to earlier telestroke activation. Additionally, there could be late-presenting patients who were not captured in our cohort due to presentation after 24 hours, thus not meeting criteria for telestroke activation. Despite this decreased time to telestroke activation, there was a reduction in the percentage of patients who received urgent stroke interventions (IV-tPA and/or thrombectomy). We noted that most of the patients who did not receive treatment had low NIHSS scores, suggesting mild stroke symptoms. The data in this regard were difficult to interpret because details on potential exclusion factors were not included as part of this review, and the number of patients in this group was small. However, this remains an area that may require further exploration to determine if urgent stroke treatment patterns are affected by the pandemic. There were no other statistically significant variables between the pre–pandemic declaration and post–pandemic declaration groups. Interestingly, age did not appear to differ between the 2 groups despite the increased morbidity associated with COVID-19 in the elderly population. Based on reports of reduced ED presentations for less severe conditions during the Middle East respiratory syndrome epidemic, one may expect a reduction in the proportion of stroke mimics and transient ischemic attacks compared with ischemic stroke diagnoses. However, such reduction was not observed in our cohort. Although we did see a reduction in the proportion of stroke mimics in the post–pandemic declaration group, it did not achieve statistical significance. Likewise, among patients with a stroke diagnosis, the NIHSS score did not appear to be significantly different between the 2 groups.

Conclusion

A clinically important reduction in telestroke activations was seen in the 30 days following the WHO declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic. This reduction mirrors early data regarding reduction of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction as well as single-center reports of reduced stroke volumes and interventions globally. At this early stage, it is difficult to identify the underlying cause of this change, and it may very well be multifactorial. Moving forward, it will be important to identify patient and physician factors that may contribute to underutilization of stroke emergency services.
  11 in total

1.  Telestroke for the Treatment of Ischemic Stroke in Western China During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multicenter Observational Study.

Authors:  Ning Chen; Xintong Wu; Muke Zhou; Rongdong Yang; Daofeng Chen; Ming Liao; Yongyi Deng; Zhen Hong; Dong Zhou; Li He
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 4.003

2.  Stroke Telemedicine for Arizona Rural Residents, the Legacy Telestroke Study.

Authors:  Bart M Demaerschalk; Maria I Aguilar; Timothy J Ingall; David W Dodick; Bert B Vargas; Dwight D Channer; Erica L Boyd; Terri E J Kiernan; Dennis G Fitz-Patrick; J Gregory Collins; Joseph G Hentz; Brie N Noble; Qing Wu; Karina Brazdys; Bentley J Bobrow
Journal:  Telemed Rep       Date:  2022-03-14

3.  Global Impact of COVID-19 on Stroke Care and IV Thrombolysis.

Authors:  Raul G Nogueira; Muhammad M Qureshi; Mohamad Abdalkader; Sheila Ouriques Martins; Hiroshi Yamagami; Zhongming Qiu; Ossama Yassin Mansour; Anvitha Sathya; Anna Czlonkowska; Georgios Tsivgoulis; Diana Aguiar de Sousa; Jelle Demeestere; Robert Mikulik; Peter Vanacker; James E Siegler; Janika Kõrv; Jose Biller; Conrad W Liang; Navdeep S Sangha; Alicia M Zha; Alexandra L Czap; Christine Anne Holmstedt; Tanya N Turan; George Ntaios; Konark Malhotra; Ashis Tayal; Aaron Loochtan; Annamarei Ranta; Eva A Mistry; Anne W Alexandrov; David Y Huang; Shadi Yaghi; Eytan Raz; Sunil A Sheth; Mahmoud H Mohammaden; Michael Frankel; Eric Guemekane Bila Lamou; Hany M Aref; Ahmed Elbassiouny; Farouk Hassan; Tarek Menecie; Wessam Mustafa; Hossam M Shokri; Tamer Roushdy; Fred S Sarfo; Tolulope Oyetunde Alabi; Babawale Arabambi; Ernest O Nwazor; Taofiki Ajao Sunmonu; Kolawole Wahab; Joseph Yaria; Haytham Hussein Mohammed; Philip B Adebayo; Anis D Riahi; Samia Ben Sassi; Lenon Gwaunza; Gift Wilson Ngwende; David Sahakyan; Aminur Rahman; Zhibing Ai; Fanghui Bai; Zhenhui Duan; Yonggang Hao; Wenguo Huang; Guangwen Li; Wei Li; Ganzhe Liu; Jun Luo; Xianjin Shang; Yi Sui; Ling Tian; Hongbin Wen; Bo Wu; Yuying Yan; Zhengzhou Yuan; Hao Zhang; Jun Zhang; Wenlong Zhao; Wenjie Zi; Thomas W Leung; Chandril Chugh; Vikram Huded; Bindu Menon; Jeyaraj Durai Pandian; P N Sylaja; Fritz Sumantri Usman; Mehdi Farhoudi; Elyar Sadeghi Hokmabadi; Anat Horev; Anna Reznik; Rotem Sivan Hoffmann; Nobuyuki Ohara; Nobuyuki Sakai; Daisuke Watanabe; Ryoo Yamamoto; Ryosuke Doijiri; Naoki Tokuda; Takehiro Yamada; Tadashi Terasaki; Yukako Yazawa; Takeshi Uwatoko; Tomohisa Dembo; Hisao Shimizu; Yuri Sugiura; Fumio Miyashita; Hiroki Fukuda; Kosuke Miyake; Junsuke Shimbo; Yusuke Sugimura; Yoshiki Yagita; Yohei Takenobu; Yuji Matsumaru; Satoshi Yamada; Ryuhei Kono; Takuya Kanamaru; Hidekazu Yamazaki; Manabu Sakaguchi; Kenichi Todo; Nobuaki Yamamoto; Kazutaka Sonoda; Tomoko Yoshida; Hiroyuki Hashimoto; Ichiro Nakahara; Aida Kondybayeva; Kamila Faizullina; Saltanat Kamenova; Murat Zhanuzakov; Jang-Hyun Baek; Yangha Hwang; Jin Soo Lee; Si Baek Lee; Jusun Moon; Hyungjong Park; Jung Hwa Seo; Kwon-Duk Seo; Sung Il Sohn; Chang Jun Young; Rechdi Ahdab; Wan Asyraf Wan Zaidi; Zariah Abdul Aziz; Hamidon Bin Basri; Law Wan Chung; Aznita Binti Ibrahim; Khairul Azmi Ibrahim; Irene Looi; Wee Yong Tan; Nafisah Wan Yahya; Stanislav Groppa; Pavel Leahu; Amal M Al Hashmi; Yahia Zakaria Imam; Naveed Akhtar; Maria Carissa Pineda-Franks; Christian Oliver Co; Dmitriy Kandyba; Adel Alhazzani; Hosam Al-Jehani; Carol Huilian Tham; Marlie Jane Mamauag; Narayanaswamy Venketasubramanian; Chih-Hao Chen; Sung-Chun Tang; Anchalee Churojana; Esref Akil; Özlem Aykaç; Atilla Ozcan Ozdemir; Semih Giray; Syed Irteza Hussain; Seby John; Huynh Le Vu; Anh Duc Tran; Huy Hoang Nguyen; Thong Nhu Pham; Thang Huy Nguyen; Trung Quoc Nguyen; Thomas Gattringer; Christian Enzinger; Monika Killer-Oberpfalzer; Flavio Bellante; Sofie De Blauwe; Geert Vanhooren; Sylvie De Raedt; Anne Dusart; Robin Lemmens; Noemie Ligot; Matthieu Pierre Rutgers; Laetitia Yperzeele; Filip Alexiev; Teodora Sakelarova; Marina Roje Bedeković; Hrvoje Budincevic; Igor Cindric; Zlatko Hucika; David Ozretic; Majda Seferovic Saric; František Pfeifer; Igor Karpowic; David Cernik; Martin Sramek; Miroslav Skoda; Helena Hlavacova; Lukas Klecka; Martin Koutny; Daniel Vaclavik; Ondrej Skoda; Jan Fiksa; Katerina Hanelova; Miroslava Nevsimalova; Robert Rezek; Petr Prochazka; Gabriela Krejstova; Jiri Neumann; Marta Vachova; Henryk Brzezanski; David Hlinovsky; Dusan Tenora; Rene Jura; Lubomír Jurák; Jan Novak; Ales Novak; Zdenek Topinka; Petr Fibrich; Helena Sobolova; Ondrej Volny; Hanne Krarup Christensen; Nicolas Drenck; Helle Klingenberg Iversen; Claus Z Simonsen; Thomas Clement Truelsen; Troels Wienecke; Riina Vibo; Katrin Gross-Paju; Toomas Toomsoo; Katrin Antsov; Francois Caparros; Charlotte Cordonnier; Maria Dan; Jean-Marc Faucheux; Laura Mechtouff; Omer Eker; Emilie Lesaine; Basile Ondze; Roxane Peres; Fernando Pico; Michel Piotin; Raoul Pop; Francois Rouanet; Tatuli Gubeladze; Mirza Khinikadze; Nino Lobjanidze; Alexander Tsiskaridze; Simon Nagel; Peter Arthur Ringleb; Michael Rosenkranz; Holger Schmidt; Annahita Sedghi; Timo Siepmann; Kristina Szabo; Götz Thomalla; Lina Palaiodimou; Dimitrios Sagris; Odysseas Kargiotis; Peter Klivenyi; Laszlo Szapary; Gabor Tarkanyi; Alessandro Adami; Fabio Bandini; Paolo Calabresi; Giovanni Frisullo; Leonardo Renieri; Davide Sangalli; Anne Pirson; Maarten Uyttenboogaart; Ido van den Wijngaard; Espen Saxhaug Kristoffersen; Waldemar Brola; Małgorzata Fudala; Ewa Horoch-Lyszczarek; Michal Karlinski; Radoslaw Kazmierski; Pawel Kram; Marcin Rogoziewicz; Rafal Kaczorowski; Piotr Luchowski; Halina Sienkiewicz-Jarosz; Piotr Sobolewski; Waldemar Fryze; Anna Wisniewska; Malgorzata Wiszniewska; Patricia Ferreira; Paulo Ferreira; Luisa Fonseca; João Pedro Marto; Teresa Pinho E Melo; Ana Paiva Nunes; Miguel Rodrigues; Vítor Tedim Cruz; Cristian Falup-Pecurariu; Georgi Krastev; Miroslav Mako; María Alonso de Leciñana; Juan F Arenillas; Oscar Ayo-Martin; Antonio Cruz Culebras; Exuperio Diez Tejedor; Joan Montaner; Soledad Pérez-Sánchez; Miguel Angel Tola Arribas; Alejandro Rodriguez Vasquez; Michael Mayza; Gianmarco Bernava; Alex Brehm; Paolo Machi; Urs Fischer; Jan Gralla; Patrik L Michel; Marios-Nikos Psychogios; Davide Strambo; Soma Banerjee; Kailash Krishnan; Joseph Kwan; Asif Butt; Luciana Catanese; Andrew M Demchuk; Thalia Field; Jennifer Haynes; Michael D Hill; Houman Khosravani; Ariane Mackey; Aleksandra Pikula; Gustavo Saposnik; Courtney Anne Scott; Ashkan Shoamanesh; Ashfaq Shuaib; Samuel Yip; Miguel A Barboza; Jose Domingo Barrientos; Ligia Ibeth Portillo Rivera; Fernando Gongora-Rivera; Nelson Novarro-Escudero; Anmylene Blanco; Michael Abraham; Diana Alsbrook; Dorothea Altschul; Anthony J Alvarado-Ortiz; Ivo Bach; Aamir Badruddin; Nobl Barazangi; Charmaine Brereton; Alicia Castonguay; Seemant Chaturvedi; Saqib A Chaudry; Hana Choe; Jae H Choi; Sushrut Dharmadhikari; Kinjal Desai; Thomas G Devlin; Vinodh T Doss; Randall Edgell; Mark Etherton; Mudassir Farooqui; Don Frei; Dheeraj Gandhi; Mikayel Grigoryan; Rishi Gupta; Ameer E Hassan; Johanna Helenius; Artem Kaliaev; Ritesh Kaushal; Priyank Khandelwal; Ayaz M Khawaja; Naim N Khoury; Benny S Kim; Dawn O Kleindorfer; Feliks Koyfman; Vivien H Lee; Lester Y Leung; Guillermo Linares; Italo Linfante; Helmi L Lutsep; Lisa Macdougall; Shailesh Male; Amer M Malik; Hesham Masoud; Molly McDermott; Brijesh P Mehta; Jiangyong Min; Manoj Mittal; Jane G Morris; Sumeet S Multani; Fadi Nahab; Krishna Nalleballe; Claude B Nguyen; Roberta Novakovic-White; Santiago Ortega-Gutierrez; Rahul H Rahangdale; Pankajavalli Ramakrishnan; Jose Rafael Romero; Natalia Rost; Aaron Rothstein; Sean Ruland; Ruchir Shah; Malveeka Sharma; Brian Silver; Marc Simmons; Abhishek Singh; Amy K Starosciak; Sheryl L Strasser; Viktor Szeder; Mohamed Teleb; Jenny P Tsai; Barbara Voetsch; Oscar Balaguera; Virginia A Pujol Lereis; Adriana Luraschi; Marcele Schettini Almeida; Fabricio Buchdid Cardoso; Adriana Conforto; Leonardo De Deus Silva; Luidia Varrone Giacomini; Fabricio Oliveira Lima; Alexandre L Longo; Pedro S C Magalhães; Rodrigo Targa Martins; Francisco Mont'alverne; Daissy Liliana Mora Cuervo; Leticia Costa Rebello; Lenise Valler; Viviane Flumignan Zetola; Pablo M Lavados; Victor Navia; Verónica V Olavarría; Juan Manuel Almeida Toro; Pablo Felipe Ricardo Amaya; Hernan Bayona; Angel Corredor; Carlos Eduardo Rivera Ordonez; Diana Katherine Mantilla Barbosa; Osvaldo Lara; Mauricio R Patiño; Luis Fernando Diaz Escobar; Donoband Edson Dejesus Melgarejo Fariña; Analia Cardozo Villamayor; Adolfo Javier Zelaya Zarza; Danny Moises Barrientos Iman; Liliana Rodriguez Kadota; Bruce Campbell; Graeme J Hankey; Casey Hair; Timothy Kleinig; Alice Ma; Rodrigo Tomazini Martins; Ramesh Sahathevan; Vincent Thijs; Daniel Salazar; Teddy Yuan-Hao Wu; Diogo C Haussen; David Liebeskind; Dileep R Yavagal; Tudor G Jovin; Osama O Zaidat; Thanh N Nguyen
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2021-03-25       Impact factor: 11.800

4.  Slump in Hospital Admissions for Stroke, a Fact of an Uncertain Nature That Requires Explanation.

Authors:  José M Ramírez-Moreno; Juan Carlos Portilla-Cuenca; Roshan Hariramani-Ramchandani; Belen Rebollo; Inés Bermejo Casado; Pablo Macías-Sedas; David Ceberino; Ana M Roa-Montero; Alberto González-Plata; Ignacio Casado; Luis Fernández de Alarcón
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2021-01-13

5.  Digital Health Surveillance Strategies for Management of Coronavirus Disease 2019.

Authors:  Thulasee Jose; David O Warner; John C O'Horo; Steve G Peters; Rajeev Chaudhry; Matthew J Binnicker; Charles D Burger
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes       Date:  2020-12-14

Review 6.  Pathomechanisms and Treatment Implications for Stroke in COVID-19: A Review of the Literature.

Authors:  Brian Stamm; Deborah Huang; Regina Royan; Jessica Lee; Joshua Marquez; Masoom Desai
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-29

7.  Impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic on stroke teleconsultations in Germany in the first half of 2020.

Authors:  Christoph Vollmuth; Olga Miljukov; Mazen Abu-Mugheisib; Anselm Angermaier; Jessica Barlinn; Loraine Busetto; Armin J Grau; Albrecht Guenther; Christoph Gumbinger; Nikolai Hubert; Katrin Hüttemann; Carsten Klingner; Markus Naumann; Frederick Palm; Jan Remi; Viktoria Rücker; Joachim Schessl; Felix Schlachetzki; Ramona Schuppner; Stefan Schwab; Andreas Schwartz; Adrian Trommer; Christian Urbanek; Bastian Volbers; Joachim Weber; Claudia Wojciechowski; Hans Worthmann; Philipp Zickler; Peter U Heuschmann; Karl Georg Haeusler; Gordian Jan Hubert
Journal:  Eur J Neurol       Date:  2021-03-22       Impact factor: 6.288

8.  Yield of Head Imaging in Ambulatory and Hospitalized Patients With SARS-CoV-2: A Multi-Center Study of 8675 Patients.

Authors:  Melanie R F Greenway; Young Erben; Josephine F Huang; Jason L Siegel; Christopher J Lamb; Mohammed K Badi; Amra Sakusic; Neethu Gopal; James F Meschia; Michelle P Lin
Journal:  Neurohospitalist       Date:  2020-12-16

9.  Acute telestroke evaluations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Alejandro Vargas; Nicholas D Osteraas; Rima M Dafer; Laurel J Cherian; Sarah Y Song; James J Conners
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2022-01-22       Impact factor: 3.830

10.  Telestroke: Maintaining Quality Acute Stroke Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Theresa Sevilis; Mark McDonald; Amanda Avila; Gregory Heath; Lan Gao; Gayle O'Brien; Mohammed Zaman; Adam Heller; Muhammad Masud; Nima Mowzoon; Thomas Devlin
Journal:  Telemed J E Health       Date:  2021-07-15       Impact factor: 5.033

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