Stroke, Vol 21, 1008-1012, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
J Biller, BB Love, III Marsh EE, MP Jones, LE Knepper, D Jiang, HP Adams Jr and DL Gordon
Recent clinical studies emphasize the importance of early (less than 12
hours after onset) treatment of patients with acute ischemic stroke.
Therapies have been proposed as being effective because of early clinical
improvement. The frequency and degree of spontaneous improvement in such
patients, however, is unknown. We prospectively evaluated the course of 29
patients (19 men, 10 women) aged 33-82 years who were seen less than or
equal to 12 hours after the onset of acute ischemic stroke. Seventeen
patients were first evaluated less than or equal to 6 hours and the
remaining patients at 6-12 hours after onset. All patients were examined
using a modified National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale at baseline, 1,
2, 3, and 6 hours. No specific treatment for acute ischemic stroke was
given during this time. Improvement (defined as a decrease of greater than
or equal to 2 points from baseline score) was noted at 1 hour in seven
patients (24%). By 6 hours 15 patients (52%) had improved, 12 (41%) were
unchanged, and two (7%) were worse. Our results suggest that spontaneous,
often dramatic improvement occurs in patients with acute ischemic stroke
and should be taken into consideration in the design of any trial of acute
treatment.
ARTICLES
Spontaneous improvement after acute ischemic stroke. A pilot study
Department of Neurology, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City 52242.
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