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(Stroke. 2008;39:2264.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Stroke Center (B.N., S.S., D.S.L., B.O., D.K., N.S., L.A., B.B., P.V., F.V., G.D., R.J., J.L.S.), and the Departments of Emergency Medicine (S.S.), Neurology (S.S., D.S.L., B.O., D.K., N.S., L.A., B.B., J.L.S.), and Radiology (P.V., F.V., G.D., R.J.), David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Correspondence to Bijen Nazliel, MD, Tunali Hilmi Caddesi 34/10, Kavakl
dere, Ankara, Turkey. E-mail bijennazliel{at}yahoo.com
| Abstract |
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Methods— The LAMS and NIHSS were scored in under-12-hour acute anterior circulation ischemic stroke patients. Stroke severity ratings were correlated with cervicocerebral vascular occlusion on CTA, MRA, and catheter angiography. Receiver operating curves, c statistics, and likelihood ratios were used to evaluate the predictive value for vascular occlusion of stroke severity ratings.
Results— Among 119 patients, mean age was 67 (±18), 45% were male. Time from onset to ED arrival was mean 190 minutes (range 10 to 660). Persisting large vessel occlusions (PLVOs) were present in 62% of patients. LAMS stroke severity scores were higher in patients harboring a vascular occlusion, median 5 (IQR 4 to 5) versus 2 (IQR 1 to 3). Similarly, NIHSS stroke severity scores were higher in PLVO patients, 19 (14 to 24) versus 5 (3 to 7). ROC curves demonstrated that the LAMS was highly effective in identifying patients with PLVOs, c statistic 0.854. At the optimal threshold of 4 or higher, LAMS scores showed sensitivity 0.81, specificity 0.89, and overall accuracy 0.85. LAMS performance was comparable to NIHSS performance (c statistic 0.933). The positive likelihood ratio associated with a LAMS score
4 was 7.36 and the negative likelihood ratio 0.21.
Conclusions— Stroke severity assessed by the LAMS predicts presence of large artery anterior circulation occlusion with high sensitivity and specificity. The LAMS is a promising instrument for use by prehospital personnel to identify select stroke patients for direct transport to Comprehensive Stroke Centers capable of endovascular interventions.
Key Words: acute stroke cerebral infarct scales LAMS (Los Angeles Motor Scale) NIHSS
| Introduction |
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Standard prehospital stroke recognition instruments identify patients likely having a stroke, but do not demarcate the subgroup of stroke patients harboring persisting large vessel occlusions who are candidates for endovascular intervention. Stroke deficit severity scales have been proposed for this purpose. Several studies have demonstrated a strong correlation between stroke deficit severity and the presence of persisting large vessel occlusion (PLVO) among acute ischemic stroke patients.4–6 Based on this association, stroke deficit severity assessed with the NIH Stroke Scale in the Emergency Department (ED) has been used to select patients for entry into clinical trials of intraarterial thrombolysis and is used in regular clinical practice at some sites for initial triage for acute endovascular therapy.7 However, the full 42-point NIHSS is too time consuming and unwieldy for routine prehospital use.
The Los Angeles Motor Scale (LAMS) is a validated, 3-item, 0- to 5-point motor stroke deficit scale, developed for prehospital and ED use, that takes 20 to 30 seconds to perform.8 As the LAMS score is derived from the motor examination portion of the Los Angeles Prehospital Stroke Screen (LAPSS), a validated and widely used stroke identification instrument that is a part of the international training curriculum for prehospital personnel,9 the LAMS does not add any time to standard prehospital stroke assessments. The LAMS has good interrater reliability, correlates strongly with the full NIHSS (concurrent validity), and predicts final stroke functional outcomes as well as the NIHSS (predictive validity).10,11
This study was undertaken to determine whether LAMS scores can predict the presence of large vessel occlusions in acute cerebral ischemia patients.
| Methods |
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Los Angeles Motor Scale (Table) scores at entry were derived from (1) the face and arm strength item of the entry NIHSS, and (2) the grip examination as documented in the charted admission pretreatment physical examination. For facial strength, a LAMS score of 0 (normal) was assigned if the NIHSS facial palsy item was scored 0 (normal) or 1 (minor asymmetry), and a LAMS score of 1 (weak) was assigned if the NIHSS facial palsy item was scored 2 (partial) or 3 (complete). For arm strength, a LAMS score of 0 (normal) was assigned if the NINHS motor arm item was scored 0 (normal); a LAMS score of 1 (drifts down) was assigned if the NIHSS motor arm item was scored 1 (drift); and a LAMS score of 2 (falls rapidly) was assigned if NIHSS motor arm item was scored 2 (some effort against gravity) or 3 (no effort against gravity). For grip strength, a LAMS score of 0 (normal) was assigned if the admission neurological examination rated grip strength as 5 (normal); a LAMS score of 1 (weak) was assigned if the neurological examination rated grip strength as 4 (weak), 3 (some movement against gravity), or 2 (some movement, but not against gravity); a LAMS score of 2 (no grip) was assigned if the neurological examination rated grip strength as 1 (muscle contraction but no movement) or 0 (no muscle contraction). All examiners were certified in the NIH Stroke Scale.
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During the study period, standard practice was to obtain arrival intracranial vascular imaging in all patients with magnetic resonance angiography, computed tomography angiography, or catheter angiography, and arrival cervical vascular imaging with magnetic resonance angiography, computed tomography angiography, carotid ultrasound, or catheter angiography. Findings on the first vessel imaging study performed were used to classify patients in 1 to 6 groups according to the location of their arterial occlusion.
Patients with 2 or more tandem occluded arteries were classified in the group of the largest occluded artery.6
Receiver operating curves, c statistics, and likelihood ratios were used to evaluate the predictive value for vascular occlusion of stroke severity ratings.
| Results |
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The time interval from last known well to ED arrival was mean 190±128 minutes, range 10 to 660. The time interval from last known well to LAMS and NIHSS examination was mean 254±137 minutes, last known well to first intracranial vascular imaging 324±171 minutes, and last known well to first cervical vascular imaging 400±297 minutes. The modality used for first intracranial vascular imaging was MRA in 80 (67%), catheter angiography in 33 (27%), and CTA in 6 (5%). The modality used for first cervical vascular imaging was catheter angiography in 58 (48%), MRA in 45 (37%), CTA in 6 (5%), and carotid ultrasound in 2 (2%).
At vascular imaging, 74 patients (62%) had arterial occlusions and 45 no arterial occlusions. Among the patients with vascular occlusions, sites of occlusion were ICA in 21, M1 MCA in 48, M2 MCA in 4, and M3/4 MCA in 1. LAMS stroke severity scores were higher in patients harboring vascular occlusion, median 5 (IQR 4 to 5) versus 2 (IQR 1 to 3), P<0.001. Similarly, NIHSS stroke severity scores were higher in PLVO patients, median 19 (IQR 14 to 24) versus 5 (3 to 7), P<0.001. Site of PLVO affected both LAMS scores and NIHSS scores. For the LAMS, the median score for an ICA PLVO was 5 (IQR 5- to 5); M1 MCA 5 (4 to 5); M2 1.5 (0.5- to 3.5) For the NIHSS, the median score for an ICA PLVO was 24 (IQR 19- to 26); M1 MCA 17 (14- to 22.5); M2 6 (4- to 13.5).
ROC curves (Figure) demonstrated that the LAMS was highly effective in identifying patients with PLVOs, c statistic 0.854. At the optimal threshold of 4 or higher, LAMS scores showed sensitivity 0.81, specificity 0.89, and overall accuracy 0.85. The positive likelihood ratio associated with a LAMS score
4 was 7.36 and the negative likelihood ratio 0.21. LAMS performance was comparable to NIHSS performance (c statistic 0.933). At the optimal cut point of 11 or higher, NIHSS scores showed sensitivity 0.91, specificity 0.87, and overall accuracy 0.89.
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| Discussion |
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4 increases by 7-fold the likelihood that a stroke patient harbors a persisting large vessel vascular occlusion. During the hyperacute phase of stroke, knowledge of the persistence of arterial occlusion can help guide many aspects of management, particularly regarding endovascular recanalization interventions. Patients with acute deficits and without visible vessel occlusions tend to have less severe clinical deficits and better functional outcomes with supportive management alone. These patients typically have already spontaneously recanalized, have occlusions of small, deep penetrators, or have occlusions of far distal superficial branch arteries.12 They generally harbor less tissue at risk and have no vascular lesion target appropriate for endovascular intervention. The LAMS already has demonstrated several advantageous properties as an instrument for prehospital rating of stroke severity. It has been validated as an accurate assessment of stroke severity in both clinical trial and broad typical clinical practice populations.8,11 Compared with other instruments proposed for prehospital stroke severity assessment,13,14 the LAMS has advantages of greater simplicity, more rapid administration, and of being immediately derivable from a validated stroke recognition instrument, rather than requiring separate examinations for stroke diagnosis and stroke severity assessment. This studys demonstration that the LAMS can additionally identify patients likely harboring persistent large vessel occlusions that are appropriate targets for endovascular therapy adds to the value of this instrument.
In addition to demonstrating the utility of the LAMS in predicting arterial occlusion, this study confirms and extends the finding of prior studies that the NIHSS has substantial discriminating value in predicting PLVO. The optimal cutoff NIHSS score of 11 in our cohort is consonant with prior studies that have found NIHSS thresholds of 10 to 12 to have the greatest discriminatory value.4–6,15 Our study expands on prior studies confined to patients undergoing catheter angiography4–6 to demonstrate the predictive utility of stroke severity assessments in a broad range of ischemic stroke patients.
This study does have several limitations. LAMS exams were performed by physicians on hospital arrival rather than by prehospital personnel in the field. However, a prior study has demonstrated good concordance between LAMS scores generated by physicians and prehospital personnel.10 Vascular occlusions were identified in most patients on the basis of noninvasive MRA and CTA studies, rather than catheter angiograms. But MRA and CTA have been repeatedly shown to correlate well with invasive angiography in acute stroke patients, especially for the proximal occlusions that are the appropriate targets for endovascular intervention. This was a retrospective study of 2 well-characterized convenience samples (1 year of consecutive admissions and 11 years of patients enrolled in acute clinical trials). Prospective studies of a fully unselected, consecutive sample are needed to fully validate the findings.
Stroke severity scores on the Los Angeles Motor Scale predict the presence of persisting large vessel occlusions. Performing the LAMS/LAPSS is a highly expeditious strategy to identify stroke patients in the field, assess their severity, and determine the likelihood that they are candidates for endovascular therapies. For individual hospitals performing endovascular interventions, once paramedics identify a patient meeting with a LAMS score of
4, prearrival notification could accelerate endovascular interventions by permitting early mobilization of the endovascular team and readying of the angiographic suite. For regional systems of care in which EMS routes patients directly to the most appropriate receiving hospitals, a LAMS score
4 may be used to route select patients directly to Comprehensive Stroke Centers, avoiding delays introduced by initial delivery to and secondary transfer from nonendovascular sites.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported in part by a Visiting Scholar Award from TUBITAK, the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (B.N.), and NIH-NINDS Award P50 NS044378 (J.L.S.).
Disclosures
None.
Received November 19, 2007; accepted December 12, 2007.
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