• Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · Jul 2002

    [Stroke management on general medical departments. A multicenter study in Austria].

    • J Slany, R Lenzhofer, R Kaiser, I Exner, W Schmid, H Hügel, A Pratter, and M Martinek-Bregel.
    • 2. Medizinische Abteilung, Rudolfstiftung Wien. joerg.slany@kar.magwien.gv.at
    • Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. 2002 Jul 26;127(30):1575-80.

    Background And ObjectiveDespite the claimed superiority of Stroke Units a majority of patients with acute stroke is still treated on general medical departments in many countries. In Austria 90 % of 121 medical departments state that they take care of stroke patients routinely or at least sometimes. Therefore, our aim was to evaluate whether stroke management on medical wards meets up-to-date standards.Patients And Methods55 medical departments all over Austria participated in a prospective multicenter registry documenting diagnostics, treatment and the in-hospital course of unselected patients admitted with an acute stroke according to a standardised protocol.Results1100 patients, 56 % female, with a median age of 75 years were assessed. Median hospital stay was 14 days. In 96 % a cranial computer tomogram was performed. 81 % of cerebral lesions were ischemic, 10 % haemorrhagic. Only 10 % had no risk factor or accompanying medical disease. 31 % suffered at least one medical and 18 % one neurological complication (p = 0.00000003). In-hospital mortality was 17 %, functional outcome was poor in 27 % (Rankin scale [RS] 4 or 5) and good in 56 % (RS 0-3). 74 % of discharged patients could leave to their home, 13 % were transferred to a nursing home and 13 % to a rehabilitation center. 95 % of surviving patients left on either an antiplatelet or an anticoagulant medication and 73 % received antihypertensives.ConclusionOutcome of stroke patients treated on general medical departments seems to be fairly comparable to that commonly reported by neurological Stroke Units. Further improvements may be obtained by implementation of integrated "mixed assessment" units into medical departments.

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