223 results
Search Results
202. Hyper acute stroke unit services
- Author
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Simon D Liu, C. A. Davie, and Anthony Rudd
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Stroke patient ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Unit (housing) ,London ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Letters to the Editor ,Stroke ,Interventional neuroradiology ,Acute stroke ,Stroke services ,Patient Care Team ,business.industry ,Editorials ,General Medicine ,Thrombolysis ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,United Kingdom ,Emergency medicine ,Critical Pathways ,Number needed to treat ,Medical emergency ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Hospital Units - Abstract
As Bob Dylan has said ‘The times they are a-changin’. Only a decade ago stroke patients in the UK would routinely wait two to three days for their emergency computed tomography (CT) scan following admission. Some thought that this delay was even advantageous as it allowed infarct changes to become well established. For ischaemic strokes, acute treatment was limited to aspirin. Moving forward 10 years, with the introduction of routine intravenous thrombolysis and the advent of interventional neuroradiology, Greater London has undergone a dramatic transformation of acute stroke services. Currently, eight hyper acute stroke units (HASUs) are being established across the capital, providing 116 monitored beds (Fig 1). The aim of this is to offer equitable, around-the-clock access to stroke specialists, investigations, imaging and, if indicated, thrombolysis. Thrombolysis, if given early enough, has been shown to significantly reduce stroke morbidity, with a number needed to treat of 3.1. 1 This has the potential to make serious inroads into a condition that afflicts 110,000 people yearly in the UK. If established infarct changes are seen on a CT brain, stroke physicians now would feel an opportunity had been missed. This paper describes experiences in the North Central London sector, which spans inner city areas to the northern green belt, with University College Hospital (UCLH) as the serving HASU. Transforming stroke services has been taxing at times and some of the key challenges faced and lessons learnt are discussed below.
- Published
- 2011
203. Recent progress in drug treatment for acute ischemic stroke
- Author
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J. Bogousslavsky and Gérald Devuyst
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brain Ischemia ,Drug treatment ,Neuroprotective Drugs ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,medicine ,Abciximab ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,cardiovascular diseases ,Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator ,Intensive care medicine ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Acute stroke ,business.industry ,Thrombolysis ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Emergency medicine ,Acute Disease ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The publication of the positive results of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) trial of alteplase (a recombinant tissue plasminogen activator; rt-PA) for acute stroke patients in 1995 and its approval by the US Food and Drug Administration as well as the American Academy of Neurology and American Heart Association increased the interest and attention of the medical community in acute stroke treatment. However, the implication of this NINDS Stroke Study and other thrombolytic trials in clinical practice remains controversial and debated. Furthermore, the recent publication of the results from the European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study II (ECASS II) and Alteplase Thrombolysis of Acute Noninterventional Therapy in Ischemic Stroke (ATLANTIS) studies will feed the controversy, since the results of these two studies are disappointing and do not confirm the positive results of the NINDS Stroke Study as expected by clinicians managing patients with acute stroke. The Standard Treatment with Alteplase to Reverse Stroke (STARS) and Cleveland studies, which involved a large number of community hospitals to assess the safety profile and the benefit of rt-PA thrombolysis for acute stroke patients in clinical practice, have shown controversial results. Consequently, the issue arises of which is the more reasonable position concerning thrombolysis by alteplase, which seems to work but has not been proven yet beyond reasonable doubt? The recent publication of the results from the Prolyse in Acute Cerebral Thromboembolism (PROACT II) study has shown that intra-arterial thrombolysis with prourokinase is a benefit treatment in stroke patients with a proven middle cerebral artery occlusion within 6 h of stroke onset. Numerous trials devoted to neuroprotection against acute ischemic stroke have been prematurely stopped because of safety concerns or poor risk-benefit ratios, but some new neuroprotective drugs seem promising and are being tested in ongoing studies. The third issue under study concerns the use of antithrombotic drugs in the acute phase of stroke, particularly the new potent platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa antagonists such as abciximab. In this paper, we have reviewed selected recent clinical trials focusing on recent advances in acute stroke therapy.
- Published
- 2001
204. Extracting parametric images from dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI studies of the brain using factor analysis
- Author
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Alan R. Moody, Anne L. Martel, G.S. Delay, S J Allder, and Paul S. Morgan
- Subjects
CONTRAST ENHANCED MRI ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Contrast Media ,Health Informatics ,medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Contrast (vision) ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,media_common ,Parametric statistics ,Acute stroke ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Pattern recognition ,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Stroke ,Cerebral blood flow ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI ,A priori and a posteriori ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Factor Analysis, Statistical - Abstract
Factor analysis of dynamic studies (FADS) is a technique that allows structures with different temporal characteristics to be extracted from dynamic contrast enhanced studies without making any a priori assumptions about physiology. These dynamic structures may correspond to different tissue types or different organs or they may simply be a useful way of characterising the data. This paper describes a method of automatically extracting factor images and curves from contrast enhanced MRI studies of the brain. This method has been applied to 107 studies carried out on patients with acute stroke. The results show that FADS is able to extract factor curves correlated to arterial and venous signal intensity curves and that the corresponding factor images allow a distinction to be made between areas of the brain with normal and abnormal perfusion. The method is robust and can be applied routinely to dynamic studies of the brain. The constraints described are sufficiently general to be applicable to other dynamic MRI contrast enhanced studies where an increase in contrast concentration produces an increase in signal intensity.
- Published
- 2001
205. Technologies for diagnosis and treatment of acute stroke
- Author
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J.P. Fitch
- Subjects
Medical education ,Documentation ,Trademark ,business.industry ,Health care ,Medicine ,Library science ,Technology assessment ,National laboratory ,business ,Multidisciplinary team ,Acute stroke ,Technical progress - Abstract
From October 1994 to June 1997, a multidisciplinary team of scientists and engineers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory were funded through LDRD to develop and integrate technologies for diagnosis and treatment of acute stroke. The project was summarized in a Science and Technology Review article `Brain Attack` that appeared in June 1997 and again in the Center for Healthcare Technologies Report (UCRL-LR-124761). This article is the best overview of the project, epidemiology of stroke and technical progress. Most of the technical progress has been documented in conference papers and presentations and refereed journal articles. Additional technical publication can be expected as our remaining patent applications progress through the US Patent and Trademark Office. The purpose of this report is to provide an appropriate introduction and organization to the numerous publications so that interested readers can quickly find information. Because there is no documentation for the history of this project, this report provides a summary. It also provides the final status report for the LDRD funding.
- Published
- 1998
206. Improving A&E waiting times for acute stroke
- Author
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AJ Oates, A Wright, JA Keir, and J Paskins
- Subjects
Waiting time ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Leadership and Management ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Emergency medicine ,Accident and emergency ,medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Acute stroke - Abstract
This paper looks at improving care and trolley waiting times for acute stroke patients in Accident and Emergency departments.
- Published
- 2004
207. Blood Pressure in Acute Stroke and Its Prognostic Value
- Author
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Konstantinos Spengos, Konstantinos Vemmos, and Georgios Tsivgoulis
- Subjects
Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Intracerebral hemorrhage ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lacunar stroke ,business.industry ,Diastole ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Coronary artery disease ,Blood pressure ,Heart failure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Acute stroke - Abstract
To the Editor: We read with interest the recent paper by Castillo and colleagues evaluating the prognostic relevance of admission blood pressure (BP) values and describing a U-shaped effect in patients with acute ischemic stroke, as well as Boysen’s editorial comment on this issue.1,2 The study’s conclusion was that both high and low admission BP values are associated with poor prognosis regarding early neurological deterioration, infarct volume, and mortality at 3 months. After adjustment for the use of antihypertensive drugs and BP drop >20mm Hg, the authors found that the latter was the most important prognostic factor for poor outcome. Before accepting these important conclusions, we think that some comments are needed. We have also evaluated the prognostic value of admission BP values in an unselected collective of acute stroke patients. Our findings demonstrated that early and late mortality in patients with ischemic stroke as well as in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage followed a U-shaped pattern in relation to systolic and diastolic BP at admission.3 Low admission BP values were associated with heart failure and coronary artery disease, whereas high BP values were associated with history of hypertension and lacunar stroke. Death due to cardiovascular disease was significantly more frequent among patients with admission BP values beneath the U-point of 130 mm Hg, whereas death due to brain edema was significantly more frequent above this U-point.3 We also demonstrated by means of 24-hour BP monitoring that persisting elevated systolic 24-hour BP values during the acute phase of stroke are associated with subsequent brain edema formation in patients not receiving antihypertensive medication during the BP monitoring.4 Investigating the relationship …
- Published
- 2004
208. Predicting functional outcome in acute stroke--prognostic models and clinical judgement
- Author
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Ursula G. Schulz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Clinical judgement ,medicine.disease ,Outcome (game theory) ,Patient management ,Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Stroke ,Prognostic models ,Acute stroke - Abstract
SSV model is a useful research tool In their paper (see pp 401),1 Counsell et al compare a “six simple variable” (SSV) model, which they developed for predicting outcome after stroke,2 with two other simple models and with clinical predictions of stroke outcome, and find that their model is at least as good as the other evaluated predictive systems. Predictive models of stroke outcome may be useful in epidemiological studies and clinical trials of stroke to stratify cohorts by baseline severity, and they could also guide patient management. A multitude of predictive models already exists,3 and one might argue that yet another model …
- Published
- 2004
209. Ensuring reliability of outcome measures in multicenter clinical trials of treatments for acute ischemic stroke. The program developed for the Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment (TOAST)
- Author
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William R. Clarke, Robert F. Woolson, Mark A. Albanese, and Harold P. Adams
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Certification ,Dermatan Sulfate ,Brain Ischemia ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Acute ischemic stroke ,Reliability (statistics) ,Acute stroke ,Glycosaminoglycans ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Chondroitin Sulfates ,Outcome measures ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Physical therapy ,Education, Medical, Continuing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Heparitin Sulfate ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Ensuring the reliability and validity of outcome measures used in clinical trials is essential to the success of the trial. The Trial of Org 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment (TOAST) is a multicenter clinical trial that is recruiting patients with acute ischemic stroke seen at medical centers across the United States. This paper describes an approach to train physicians to use three clinical measures: the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Stroke Scale, a supplemental motor examination, and the Glasgow Outcome Scale. The program included education, certification, remediation when needed, monitoring, and reliability assessment. The goal was to ensure that interrater assessments were as equivalent to one another as possible. Of the first 95 clinicians who began the certification process, 75 passed during the first evaluation. Eighteen of the other physicians were able to complete the process after remediation. The intraclass correlations of both the NIH Stroke Scale and supplemental motor examination exceeded 0.95. The kappa values for the Glasgow Outcome Scale were 0.61 and 0.62 for the first and second ratings of the videotape, respectively. Our experience suggests that a program that includes educational and certification processes can be performed as part of the design of a multicenter clinical trial. The method of providing educational and testing videotapes to each site so that physicians can be trained and certified is an effective, inexpensive, and practical approach for enhancing and certifying the expertise of the large number of physicians involved in a multicenter study.
- Published
- 1994
210. New possibilities of neuroprotection in ischemic stroke
- Author
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D V Sergeyev, M. A. Piradov, M. Yu. Maksimova, A N Sergeyeva, Maksim Alekseyevich Domashenko, and F R Okhtova
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ischemic strokes ,Context (language use) ,medicine.disease ,stroke ,Neuroprotection ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Medicine ,neuroprotection ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,cardiovascular diseases ,Neurology (clinical) ,Available drugs ,RC346-429 ,business ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Reperfusion and neuroprotection are two present-day therapy strategies for patients with acute stroke. The paper reviews currently available drugs used for neuroprotection in ischemic strokes in the context of evidence-based medicine.
- Published
- 2011
211. Comparison of Tc-99m HMPAO fast SPECT with Tc-99m HMPAO conventional SPECT in patients with acute stroke
- Author
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Masanori Tadokoro, Motoo Oshima, and Sadayuki Sakuma
- Subjects
Male ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Time Factors ,business.industry ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Organotechnetium Compounds ,Middle Aged ,Hmpao spect ,Models, Structural ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Technetium Tc 99m Exametazime ,Acute Disease ,Oximes ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,Female ,Tc-99m HMPAO ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Acute stroke ,Aged - Abstract
Tc-99m HMPAO SPECT is more likely to detect a stroke in early stages than CT. However, a conventional HMPAO SPECT study takes at least 30 minutes to complete. This paper compares fast Tc-99m HMPAO SPECT scans and conventional Tc-99m HMPAO SPECT scans with respect to spatial resolution and diagnostic efficacy in vitro and in a small series of patients, respectively. The spatial resolution of fast Tc-99m HMPAO SPECT did not match that of images obtained from conventional SPECT, though the difference proved to be of no clinical significance. Since fast SPECT requires only one-fourth to one-fifth the time necessary for conventional SPECT, it may be more suitable for investigating cases of acute stroke in critical clinical situations.
- Published
- 1992
212. Passive smoking and an increased risk of acute stroke
- Author
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Kenneth We Denson
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Passive smoking ,business.industry ,Confounding ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Tobacco smoke ,Serum cotinine ,Increased risk ,Environmental health ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Ischaemic heart disease ,business ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Editor,—Although “passive smoking” may be intuitively harmful, the paper by Bonita and colleagues1on the risk of stroke and environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure suffers from two fundamental defects. The first is the enormously disproportionate effect due to a small exposure, and the second is the lack of allowance for confounding variables, especially diet. Serum cotinine concentrations have recently been determined at the US National Center for Environmental Health using the most sensitive method to date of high resolution gas chromatography with mass spectrometry.2 In 10 000 subjects it was shown that the mean serum cotinine concentration in ETS exposed non-smokers was 0.6 ng/ml compared to 300 ng/ml in active smokers. This represents 1/500th of the dose received by the active smoker. It is difficult to reconcile this degree of exposure with an increased risk of stroke which is one quarter that of the active smoker. A similar disproportionate effect has been claimed for the increased risk of ischaemic heart disease and ETS exposure, but the biological plausibility and mechanisms of effect advanced to support this have been shown to lack credibility.3 4 It is well established that active smokers have other associated risk factors. They are physically less active and have lower intakes of fruit, vegetables, folate, and flavenoids,5 which are all linked to a substantial increased risk for stroke,6-8 and many of these characteristics are shared with non-smokers …
- Published
- 2000
213. Rehabilitation and acute stroke care
- Author
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Mark Bayley, David J. Gladstone, and M. Patrice Lindsay
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Early mobilization ,Letters ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
We agree with the comments of Drew Dawson and colleagues. In fact, organized care in an inpatient stroke unit — which includes early mobilization and rehabilitation — is the first key indicator in our paper[1][1] and is effective in improving outcomes after stroke.[1][1],[2][2] We recognize that
- Published
- 2005
214. Ultrafast magnetic resonance imaging protocols in stroke
- Author
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E B Ringelstein
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Interventional magnetic resonance imaging ,business.industry ,Cerebral infarction ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Time windows ,Ischaemic stroke ,medicine ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,Imaging technique ,business ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Profound changes in the protocols for the management of acute stroke patients irrespective of whether ischaemic or haemorrhagic in origin Although the approval of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) for the treatment of acute ischaemic stroke has been based on the primary imaging technique of conventional cerebral computerised tomography (CT),1 newer and more refined magnetic resonance (MR) techniques are unrelentlessly extending into this particular field of emergency medicine, stimulated by the important hope that these new techniques could help to prolong the therapeutic time window beyond the 3 hour limit in selected patients. Several recent papers have clearly demonstrated that the mismatch concept,2 though leading to diagnostic pitfalls in a small number of cases as well, seems to be helpful in …
- Published
- 2005
215. Avances y Controversias en el Diagnostico y en el Tratamiento de la Pathologia Vascular Cerebral Isquemica
- Author
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José Biller
- Subjects
business.industry ,education ,Library science ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Stroke ,Neuroscience ,health care economics and organizations ,Acute stroke ,Cerebrovascular pathology - Abstract
This volume represents a complication of papers presented at the International Symposium on Ischemic Cerebrovascular Pathology held by the Societat Catalana de Neurologia in Tarragona, Spain, in 1989. The volume opens, with the only chapter written in English, on selected aspects of human and experimental stroke. Subsequent chapters contain a number of relevant topics related to diagnostic, pathologic, and therapeutic aspects of ischemic cerebrovascular disease. There are interesting contributions on the local and regional strategies regarding care services for patients with acute stroke. Another chapter summarizes a discussion on vascular dementias and brain-heart interactions. The book is well written, easy to read, and most sections are clearly organized and referenced. Although much of the information presented is well known, the chapters serve as useful review. Overall, controversial points are presented in a well-balanced manner. Like many published reports of conference proceedings, this volume suffers from an uneven quality of the
- Published
- 1991
216. Serum S-100 Protein in Acute Stroke
- Author
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Roy Sherwood, Richard J. Butterworth, and Philip M.W. Bath
- Subjects
Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Population ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Neuronal damage ,Statistical significance ,Internal medicine ,Ischemic stroke ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,education ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
To the Editor: We read with interest the work of Missler et al1 and Buttner and colleagues2 and agree with both sets of researchers on the need for reliable, noninvasive markers of neuronal damage following acute stroke. Such markers may allow prognostication of future clinical outcome and may be useful in acute therapy trials as surrogate markers of efficacy. However, neither study cited our publication on serum S-100 protein levels in acute stroke,3 4 a study that examined 81 patients (68 with ischemic stroke and 13 with hemorrhagic stroke) within 48 hours of stroke ictus and compared them with 51 age-, race-, and gender-matched control subjects.3 As with both recent papers in Stroke , we found significantly higher serum S-100 protein levels in the stroke population than in the control group. Furthermore, the highest S-100 protein levels were seen in the hemorrhagic stroke group, and differentiation between the two stroke populations almost reached statistical significance. We also performed a temporal study (24, 48, 72, and 96 hours …
- Published
- 1998
217. Hospital referral in acute stroke
- Author
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I. Wandless
- Subjects
Male ,education.field_of_study ,Referral ,business.industry ,Population ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Hospitalization ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,England ,Humans ,Medicine ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business ,education ,Referral and Consultation ,Stroke ,Aged ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Approximately 75% of strokes occur to people aged 65 years and over. In this paper data are presented based on the results of a study of stroke disease carried out among people of this age-group in a geographically defined population. In particular, the results are used to provide an estimate of the relative contributions made by home- and hospital-care in the management of such disease in this community.
- Published
- 1983
218. Aphasia in acute stroke
- Author
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Bertel Bruun, Stephen Q. Shafer, Ralph W. Richter, and John C.M. Brust
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hemiplegia ,Audiology ,Sex Factors ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Stroke ,Aged ,Acute stroke ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Unexpected finding ,Acute Disease ,Hemianopsia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Clearance - Abstract
Previous surveys of stroke populations have offered only cursory information on language disturbance, and, conversely, few surveys of aphasic populations have dealth exclusively with stroke or with acute phenomena. This paper describes aphasia in 850 acute stroke patients consecutively registered by the Harlem Regional Stroke Program, of whom 177 (21%) were aphasic; of these, nine were of Broca's type, 24 were of Wernicke's type, 14 were of anomic, ten were conduction, seven were of "isolation" type, and 107 were "mixed." An unexpected finding was a significant over-representation of men among the nonfluent aphasics. During the following four to 12 weeks, 12% of fluent aphasics died, and 12% remained moderately or severely impaired; among survivors, aphasia improved in 74%, and in 44% it cleared completely. During the same period, 32% of nonfluent aphasics died, and 34% remained moderately or severely impaired; among survivors, aphasia improved in 52%, and in only 13% did it clear completely. In both fluent and nonfluent groups, hemiparesis and/or visual field cut were associated with poor prognosis.
- Published
- 1976
219. The triage of stroke rehabilitation
- Author
-
M E Smith, W M Garraway, A J Akhtar, and D L Smith
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Emergency Medical Services ,Epidemiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Resource Allocation ,Random Allocation ,Patient Admission ,Medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,education ,Stroke ,Acute stroke ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Triage ,Therapeutic Human Experimentation ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Emergency medicine ,Hospital admission ,Acute Disease ,Medical emergency ,business ,Hospital Units ,Research Article - Abstract
In this paper we describe the use of triage to select patients for a trial in which a comparison was made of the effectiveness of a stroke unit and medical units in the rehabilitation of acute stroke. Completing the triage for hospital admission of stroke enabled an estimate to be made of the size of a stroke unit per unit of population.
- Published
- 1981
220. Studies on cerebrovascular stroke. III. Long-term prognosis and clinical findings in a follow-up study of a stroke material
- Author
-
Göran Frithz
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cerebrovascular Stroke ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cardiac Volume ,Discharged alive ,Blood Pressure ,Sex Factors ,Recurrence ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurological findings ,Disabled Persons ,Stroke ,Acute stroke ,Aged ,Sweden ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,High mortality ,Follow up studies ,Age Factors ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Lipids ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The present paper reports the third part of an investigation of first-time cerebrovascular strokes occurring in people under the age of 70. The long-term prognosis for 214 patients discharged alive from hospital after the acute phase of the stroke is presented. The clinical and laboratory findings for 114 patients alive at the time of a follow-up examination 32 months after the stroke are discussed. The long-term prognosis could be predicted best by a score, calculated from the neurological findings on admission after the acute stroke. Recurrence of stroke was associated with a very high mortality. Forty-five per cent of the patients who survived the first month had died by the time of follow-up. About 15% were able to return to normal life or go back to work. There was a trend among patients originally severely handicapped to improve their performance ability. Factors influencing the chances for rehabilitation are discussed. Among the survivors there was a strikingly high percentage of patients with overt diabetes or decreased glucose tolerance, of patients with arteriosclerotic heart disease and patients with elevated serum triglyceride levels. These findings are discussed.
- Published
- 1975
221. Hemispheric Cerebral Blood Flow Changes with Hypervolemic Hemodilution Using Pentastarch After Acute Stroke
- Author
-
R. J. Adams, S. Hill, Fenwick T. Nichols, and D. Hughes
- Subjects
Oncotic pressure ,Pentastarch ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hydroxyethyl starch ,Ischemic cerebral infarction ,Cerebral blood flow ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Duration of effect ,business ,Saline ,Acute stroke ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Hypervolemic hemodilution is being evaluated for use in the treatment of acute ischemic cerebral infarction in a multicenter randomized, controlled study using pentastarch. Pentastarch is a 10% solution of hydroxyethyl starch in normal saline, with an average molecular weight of 264000, an intrinsic colloid oncotic pressure of 55 mm Hg, and a molar substitution of 0.45 (45 hydroxyethyl bonds for each 100 glucose molecules). It brings about a plasma expansion effect of 1.5 times the administered volume on average, with a duration of effect of about 12 h. We compared the acute changes in hemispheric cerebral blood flow associated with pentastarch treatment with the changes observed with standard medical therapy. Other researchers have documented increases in CBF with hemodilution [1–4, 6, 7]. The contribution of this paper is the comparison of two groups selected and managed by the same protocol, except for hypervolemic hemodilution with pentastarch.
- Published
- 1987
222. SEP Prognosis in Acute Stroke
- Author
-
J. W. Vredeveld
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Median nerve stimulation ,business.industry ,food and beverages ,Cancer ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Acute stage ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Myocardial infarction ,business ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Stroke is one of the major contributors towards morbidity and mortality, together with myocardial infarction and Cancer. Clinical data can give prognostic Information, not during the acute phase of the allness, but after weeks of Observation. As published earlier, the SEP can give prognostic information about recovery, even in the acute stage of the disease (1–5). In this paper the correlation between the N20 from the SEP from median nerve Stimulation and the recovery from acute stroke will be described.
- Published
- 1987
223. When should upper limb function be trained after stroke? Evidence for and against early intervention
- Author
-
Valerie Pomeroy and Ailie J. Turton
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Treatment outcome ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Intervention (counseling) ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Upper limb ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Stroke ,Acute stroke - Abstract
Very little time is available for arm and hand training while patients are in hospital after stroke. Therapeutic strategies that use intensive practice in the early days and weeks after stroke may improve the recovery of upper limb function. This paper considers the physiology of the brain in acute stroke and evaluates the evidence for and against early intensive activity of the upper limb as an essential precursor to any decision to invest in increased activity.
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