But you're not comparing it to these much faster diagnosis options.
TIME IS BRAIN you know.
Maybe you want these much faster objective diagnosis options.
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The latest here:
Immediate angiography may reduce stroke treatment time
A late-breaking abstract presented at the International Stroke Conference (ISC) 2021 (17–19 March, online) reports that immediate angiography, rather than the standard computed tomography (CT scan), reduced stroke treatment time and was linked to improved recovery.
According to researchers, standard emergency department treatment for stroke patients involves a CT scan, which uses X-rays to pinpoint the presence and location of a blood clot. Angiography is an advanced X-ray imaging method that uses a catheter inserted into the blood vessel to find the location and size of the blockage. This study focused on determining if immediate angiography improved treatment time and recovery, compared to standard CT scans.
“Our study is the first clinical trial that shows the superiority of direct transfer to an angiography suite,” said lead study author Manuel Requena, a neurologist and neurointerventionalist fellow at Vall d’Hebron Hospital, Barcelona, Spain. “Our findings were close to what we expected, and we were surprised that they occurred so early in the study. We trust that they will be confirmed in ongoing, multicentre, international trials.”
Beginning in October 2018, stroke patients who were admitted to Vall d’Hebron Hospital within six hours of stroke symptom onset with a suspected blocked blood vessel were randomly assigned to receive angiography or a cardiac CT scan. There were a total of 150 stroke patients by November 2020; the average age of the patients was 73 years, and more than half were male.
In this interim analysis, stroke patients assigned to angiography underwent testing within 19 minutes of entering the hospital—less than half of the 43 minutes for the patients who received a CT scan. Similarly, stroke patients assigned to angiography received endovascular treatment to restore blood flow 54 minutes faster, on average, compared to CT scan recipients.
At 90 days post-stroke, angiography patients were more likely than CT scan patients to show a 1-point improvement on the 6-point scale that measures stroke disability.
“Stroke patients transferred directly to an angiography suite were less likely to be dependent for assistance with daily activities compared to the stroke patients who received the current standard of care—CT scan,” Requena said. “More frequent and more rapid treatment can help improve outcomes for our stroke patients.”
A limitation of this study is that the
hospital already had extensive experience with immediate angiography, so
findings may differ at hospitals or care centres with
less angiography expertise or experience. Another limitation is that
the results of the study were not monitored by an external review group.
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