It is your responsibility not to have this type of stroke until stroke protocols are written and implemented that prevent this early neurological deterioration.
Perfusion profile evaluated by severity-weighted multiple Tmax strata predicts early neurological deterioration in minor stroke with large vessel occlusion
Abstract
Minor stroke due to large vessel occlusion (LVO) is associated with poor outcomes. Hypoperfused tissue fate may be more accurately predicted by severity-weighted multiple perfusion strata than by a single perfusion threshold. We investigated whether poor perfusion profile evaluated by multiple Tmax strata is associated with early neurological deterioration (END) in patients with minor stroke with LVO. Ninety-four patients with a baseline National Institute of Health Stroke Scale score ≤5 and anterior circulation LVO admitted within 24 hours of onset were included. Tmax strata proportions (Tmax 2–4 s, 4–6 s, 6–8 s, 8–10 s, and >10 s) against the entire hypoperfusion volume (Tmax >2 s) were measured. The perfusion profile was defined as the shift of the distribution of the Tmax strata proportions towards worse hypoperfusion severity compared with that of the entire cohort using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney generalised odds ratio (OR); its performance to predict END was tested. The area under the curve of perfusion profile was 0.785 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.691–0.878, p < 0.001). Poor perfusion profile (generalised OR >1.052) was independently associated with END (adjusted OR 13.42 [95% CI: 4.38–41.15], p < 0.001). Thus, perfusion profile with severity-weighted multiple Tmax strata may predict END in minor stroke and LVO.
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