• Acta Neurol. Scand. · Jun 2011

    Multimodal strategy in the successful implementation of a stroke unit in a community hospital.

    • T Etgen, T Freudenberger, M Schwahn, G Rieder, and D Sander.
    • Department of Neurology, Klinikum Traunstein, Cuno-Niggl-Strasse 3, Traunstein,Germany. thorleif.etgen@klinikum-traunstein.de
    • Acta Neurol. Scand. 2011 Jun 1;123(6):390-5.

    ObjectivesThrombolysis in stroke remains underutilized in daily practice. We analyzed the impact of a multimodal strategy on the rate of thrombolysis and specific procedure times during the implementation of a community hospital stroke unit.Material And MethodsDuring a period of 2 years before and after implementation of a stroke unit, we prospectively recorded all patients with thrombolysis and specific procedure times. Calculated door-to-needle time (DNT), door-to-CT time (DCT) and CT-to-needle time (CNT) were analyzed. All structural changes before and after the implementation were analyzed.ResultsThe number of patients with thrombolysis increased from 24 in 2005-2006 (4.8% of all admitted patients with ischemic stroke) to 95 in 2007-2008 (12.8%). DNT was significantly reduced from 62.2±36.1 to 38.5±22.2 min (P<0.001). DCT remained unchanged at 10.3±9.5 to 10.4±13.9 min (P=0.974), whereas CNT improved from 45.7±23.1 to 28.3±20.3 min (P=0.001). Several structural changes concerning staff, logistics, procedures and laboratory were identified which contributed to decreasing DNT.ConclusionsA multimodal strategy including several structural changes enables the successful implementation of a community hospital stroke unit offering rapid access to thrombolysis with a very short DNT.© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.

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