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Stroke, Vol 21, 867-873, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association


ARTICLES

Community hospital-based stroke programs in North Carolina, Oregon, and New York. IV. Stroke diagnosis and its relation to demographics, risk factors, and clinical status after stroke

BM Coull, JK Brockschmidt, G Howard, C Becker, FM Yatsu, JF Toole, KR McLeroy and J Feibel
Department of Neurology, University of Oregon Medical Center, Portland 97201.

The use of diagnostic tests, the accuracy of stroke type diagnosis, and their relationship to outcome are important from the standpoint of patient management and health care costs. To address this issue, we examined the differences between stroke types in terms of demographics, risk factors, diagnostic tests, and clinical outcome in the 4,129 patients who comprise the Community Hospital-Based Stroke Program. Previous transient ischemic attacks were equally frequent among patients with embolic and those with thrombotic stroke. For all stroke types, previous stroke was as frequent as previous transient ischemic attacks. Hypertension and cardiac disease were the most common risk factors, but 10% of all stroke patients had no recognized risk factors. Intracerebral hemorrhage was most often associated with death (45%). There was a strong direct relation between in-hospital mortality and a decreased level of consciousness at admission. Overall, 30% of patients did not receive a specific stroke type diagnosis; these patients were elderly, usually nonwhite, and often had an altered level of consciousness at admission but had a risk factor profile similar to that of patients who received a specific stroke type diagnosis. In summary, our findings suggest the continued need for physician education about and refinement of stroke type diagnosis.


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