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COVID-19 did not result in increased hospitalization for stroke and transient ischemic attack:A nationwide study

Authors :
Simonsen, Claus Z.
Blauenfeldt, Rolf A.
Hedegaard, Jakob N.
Kruuse, Christina
Gaist, David
Wienecke, Troels
Modrau, Boris
Johnsen, Søren P.
Andersen, Grethe
Simonsen, Claus Z.
Blauenfeldt, Rolf A.
Hedegaard, Jakob N.
Kruuse, Christina
Gaist, David
Wienecke, Troels
Modrau, Boris
Johnsen, Søren P.
Andersen, Grethe
Source :
Simonsen , C Z , Blauenfeldt , R A , Hedegaard , J N , Kruuse , C , Gaist , D , Wienecke , T , Modrau , B , Johnsen , S P & Andersen , G 2022 , ' COVID-19 did not result in increased hospitalization for stroke and transient ischemic attack : A nationwide study ' , European Journal of Neurology , vol. 29 , no. 8 , pp. 2269-2274 .
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: The risk of thrombosis increases in infectious diseases, yet observational studies from single centers have shown a decrease in admission of acute ischemic stroke patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. To investigate unselected stroke admission rates we performed a nationwide study in Denmark. Methods: We extracted information from Danish national health registries. The following mutually exclusive time periods were compared to the year before the lockdown: (1) first national lockdown, (2) gradual reopening, (3) few restrictions, (4) regional lockdown, and (5) second national lockdown. Results: Generally, admission rates were unchanged during the pandemic. In the unadjusted data, we observed a small decrease in the admission rate for all strokes under the first lockdown (incidence rate ratio: 0.93, confidence interval [CI]: 0.87–0.99) and a slight increase during the periods with gradual reopening, few restrictions, and the regional lockdown driven by ischemic strokes. We found no change in the rate of severe strokes, mild strokes, or 30-day mortality. An exception was the higher mortality for all strokes during the first lockdown (risk ratio: crude 1.30 [CI: 1.03–1.59]; adjusted 1.17 [CI: 0.93–1.47]). The quality of care remained unchanged. Conclusion: Stroke admission rates remained largely unchanged during the pandemic, while an increased short-term mortality rate in patients admitted with stroke observed during the first lockdown was seen, probably reflecting that the more frail patients constituted a higher proportion of admitted patients at the beginning of the pandemic.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Simonsen , C Z , Blauenfeldt , R A , Hedegaard , J N , Kruuse , C , Gaist , D , Wienecke , T , Modrau , B , Johnsen , S P & Andersen , G 2022 , ' COVID-19 did not result in increased hospitalization for stroke and transient ischemic attack : A nationwide study ' , European Journal of Neurology , vol. 29 , no. 8 , pp. 2269-2274 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372659818
Document Type :
Electronic Resource