9 research outputs found
Advanced cerebral monitoring in neurocritical care
New cerebral monitoring techniques allow direct measurement of brain
oxygenation and metabolism. Investigation using these new tools has
provided additional insight into the understanding of the
pathophysiology of acute brain injury and suggested new ways to guide
management of secondary brain injury. Studies of focal brain tissue
oxygen monitoring have suggested ischemic thresholds in focal regions
of brain injury and demonstrated the interrelationship between brain
tissue oxygen tension (P bt O 2 ) and other cerebral physiologic and
metabolic parameters. Jugular venous oxygen saturation (SjVO 2 )
monitoring may evaluate global brain oxygen delivery and consumption,
providing thresholds for detecting brain hypoperfusion and
hyperperfusion. Furthermore, critically low values of P bt O 2 and SjVO
2 have also been predictive of mortality and worsened functional
outcome, especially after head trauma. Cerebral microdialysis measures
the concentrations of extracellular metabolites which may be relevant
to cerebral metabolism or ischemia in focal areas of injury. Cerebral
blood flow may be measured in the neurointensive care unit using
continuous methods such as thermal diffusion and laser Doppler
flowmetry. Initial studies have also attempted to correlate findings
from advanced neuromonitoring with neuroimaging using dynamic perfusion
computed tomography, positron emission tomography, and Xenon computed
tomography. Additionally, new methods of data acquisition, storage, and
analysis are being developed to address the increasing burden of
patient data from neuromonitoring. Advanced informatics techniques such
as hierarchical data clustering, generalized linear models, and heat
map dendrograms are now being applied to multivariable patient data in
order to better develop physiologic patient profiles to improve
diagnosis and treatment
Global Impact of COVID-19 on Stroke Care and IV Thrombolysis
Objective
To measure the global impact of COVID-19 pandemic on volumes of IV thrombolysis (IVT), IVT transfers, and stroke hospitalizations over 4 months at the height of the pandemic (March 1 to June 30, 2020) compared with 2 control 4-month periods.
Methods.
We conducted a cross-sectional, observational, retrospective study across 6 continents, 70 countries, and 457 stroke centers. Diagnoses were identified by their ICD-10 codes or classifications in stroke databases.
Results.
There were 91,373 stroke admissions in the 4 months immediately before compared to 80,894 admissions during the pandemic months, representing an 11.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] −11.7 to −11.3, p \u3c 0.0001) decline. There were 13,334 IVT therapies in the 4 months preceding compared to 11,570 procedures during the pandemic, representing a 13.2% (95% CI −13.8 to −12.7, p \u3c 0.0001) drop. Interfacility IVT transfers decreased from 1,337 to 1,178, or an 11.9% decrease (95% CI −13.7 to −10.3, p = 0.001). Recovery of stroke hospitalization volume (9.5%, 95% CI 9.2–9.8, p \u3c 0.0001) was noted over the 2 later (May, June) vs the 2 earlier (March, April) pandemic months. There was a 1.48% stroke rate across 119,967 COVID-19 hospitalizations. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection was noted in 3.3% (1,722/52,026) of all stroke admissions.
Conclusions.
The COVID-19 pandemic was associated with a global decline in the volume of stroke hospitalizations, IVT, and interfacility IVT transfers. Primary stroke centers and centers with higher COVID-19 inpatient volumes experienced steeper declines. Recovery of stroke hospitalization was noted in the later pandemic months