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Acute Stroke Care in Mexico City: The Hospital Phase of a Stroke Surveillance Study.

Authors :
Aguilar-Salas E
Rodríguez-Aquino G
García-Domínguez K
Garfias-Guzmán C
Hernández-Camarillo E
Oropeza-Bustos N
Arguelles-Castro R
Mitre-Salazar A
García-Torres G
Reynoso-Marenco M
Morales-Andrade E
Gervacio-Blanco L
García-López V
Valiente-Herves G
Martínez-Marino M
Flores-Silva F
Chiquete E
Cantú-Brito C
Source :
Brain sciences [Brain Sci] 2022 Jun 30; Vol. 12 (7). Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jun 30.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Acute stroke care has greatly improved in recent decades. However, the increasing stroke mortality in low-to-middle income countries suggests that progress has not been reached completely by these populations. Here we present the analysis of the hospital phase of the first population-based stroke surveillance study. Methods: A daily hospital surveillance method was used to identify adult patients with acute stroke during 18 months in six hospitals. We abstracted data on demographics, vascular risk factors, neuroimaging-confirmed stroke types, and clinical data. Results: A total of 1361 adults with acute stroke were identified (mean age 69.2 years; 52% women) with transient ischemic attack (5.5%), acute ischemic stroke (68.6%), intracerebral hemorrhage (23.1%), cerebral venous thrombosis (0.2%), and undetermined stroke (2.6%). The main risk factors were hypertension (80.7%) and diabetes mellitus (47.6%). The usage rate of thrombolysis was 3.6%, in spite of the fact that 37.2% of acute ischemic stroke patients arrived in <4.5 h. The 30-day case fatality rate was 32.6%, higher in hemorrhagic than ischemic stroke. Conclusion: We identified limitations in acute stroke care in the Mexico City, including neuroimaging availability and thrombolysis usage. The door-to-door phase will help to depict the acute stroke burden in Mexico.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2076-3425
Volume :
12
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Brain sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35884672
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12070865