Saturday, October 10, 2015

Many doctors admit difficulty in treating unexplained stroke: poll

More reasons why the complete stroke leadership team needs to be fired.  When I was a programmer and was handed a problem to solve I was NEVER allowed to come back with, 'It is unexplainable.' You do that enough times and you would be fired. There were times it took me 6 months to figure it out but I always managed to find the problem. I may not have been smart enough to fix the problem, but I found it. 200,000 failures a year and they are still employed?
My doctor supposedly found the cause of my stroke. A dissection of my right carotid artery. But I really have to question if he truly knew that. A later ultrasound revealed that that artery had completely closed up and the doctor at the time speculated that it would have been 80% blocked at the time of my stroke. My doctors never told me about such blockage or suggested any interventions, like maybe an endarterectomy. So I really have to question if they found that blockage at all. Looking at my medical records it is impossible to tell if they found such blockage, I would think they would tell the patient that you were at extreme risk for another stroke because such blockage has already proven to be unstable and that is why you were put on warfarin. But I was pretty much treated as a non-entity. It was appalling that I was not told anything about my CVA, not even what the hell a CVA was.
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-10-doctors-difficulty-unexplained-poll.html?ref=yfp
More than half of American doctors do not feel confident that they can spot the reason for a stroke that strikes in the absence of a clearly established cause.
The poll, conducted by the American Heart Association (AHA) and the American Stroke Association (ASA), involved more than 650 neurologists, cardiologists, hospitalists, and stroke coordinators.
The survey questions focused on the degree to which such medical professionals felt adequately informed about so-called "cryptogenic strokes," which are strokes that remain unexplained even after comprehensive testing.
"The ability to discern the causes of cryptogenic strokes has profound implications for preventing secondary strokes and improving patient outcomes," Dr. Mary Ann Bauman, chair of the American Stroke Association's advisory committee, said in an AHA/ASA news release.
Bauman added that improving current preparedness to handle such strokes is "likely to require educating and the scientific community about cryptogenic stroke, appropriate work-up, applicable studies and outcomes."
Bauman said that stroke is currently the fifth-leading cause of death in the United States, and a leading cause of severe and long-term disability.
Every year, about 200,000 Americans experience a that seems to elude explanation, the researchers added.
Possible underlying causes can include an intermittent and hard-to-detect irregular heartbeat (atrial fibrillation), a blood clot disorder and/or a hole in the heart's upper chambers, according to background information in the news release.
But the poll revealed that between 51 percent and 70 percent of the respondents do not feel confident that they know exactly which steps are best to take to be able to pinpoint exactly which cause might be at play for a particular patient.
The survey results were to be reported Friday at the AHA/ASA-sponsored Cryptogenic Stroke Public Health Conference, in Washington, D.C.
Research presented at meetings is considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

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