21 research outputs found

    Explorative survey on the usage and needs of Mobile Health Applications (mhealth) amongst caregivers in taking care of stroke survivors

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    Mobile health (mHealth) applications may assist stroke caregivers in answering the unmet needs of inadequate information and support from healthcare professionals. This study aimed to explore the usage and needs of mHealth applications among stroke caregivers and its associated factors. This cross-sectional study involved 207 stroke caregivers attending hospital and community-based stroke clinics in Kuala Lumpur between December 2020 until March 2021. The survey was done through newly developed self-administered bilingual questionnaires using face to face interviews, telephone interviews and Google form. Most caregivers (77.8%) used at least one mHealth application for self-care or during the caregiving process. The three most types of mHealth applications were contacting healthcare professionals (89.9%), disease monitoring (89.4%) and health information (89.4%). The three most features of mHealth applications were free to download/use (94.7%), simple interface (93.7%) and data security/privacy (93.7%). Chi-square test of association showed managing appointment (χ2 (1) = 5.65, p = 0.017), health information (χ2 (1) = 6.72, p = 0.01), disease monitoring (χ2 (1) = 9.58, p = 0.002), contacting healthcare professional (χ2 (1) = 6.27, p = 0.012) and patient disability level (χ2 (1) = 4.29, p = 0.038) were significantly associated with specific types of mHealth applications. In conclusion, the overall usage of mHealth applications among stroke caregivers was high, with the need of specific types and features in mHealth applications among stroke caregivers

    Neuroleptic malignant syndrome in an elderly patient with bipolar disorder

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    Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) is a well-known and potentially fatal complication of antipsychotic use. The elderly population, with multiple risk factors, are more vulnerable to this condition. We described a case of an 80-year-old man with bipolar disorder, previously on oral extended-release sodium valproate, aripiprazole and long-acting injectable paliperidone, who developed NMS. He presented with generalised muscle rigidity, fever, fluctuating blood pressure and elevated creatinine kinase during his hospitalisation for a manic episode. Contributing factors included old age, underlying vascular Parkinsonism, electrolyte imbalance, intercurrent lung infection with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hyperactive delirium, and repeated administration of parenteral typical antipsychotic. Antipsychotics were withheld promptly, and the patient was treated with dantrolene, bromocriptine and amantadine. His symptoms resolved after a week. He subsequently remained well with oral extended-release sodium valproate alone. Relevant clinical points are discussed. Clinical vigilance, close interdisciplinary cooperation, and prompt interventions are keys to successful to management of NMS in elderly patients

    Successful intravenous thrombolysis of a wake-up stroke with underlying valvular atrial fibrillation

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    A 42-year-old female admitted with new-onset atrial fibrillation had a wake-up stroke on the high-dependency unit and the time last seen well (TLSW) was 6.5 h. She suffered left-sided body weakness and her National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was 17. An emergency CT perfusion showed right M1 segment occlusion with more than 50% penumbra. She was given recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (r-tPA) at 9 h from TLSW. An immediate diagnostic angiogram with intention to treat, owing to the presence of large vessel occlusion, showed complete reperfusion after intravenous r-tPA. She was discharged with NIHSS of 2, and at 3-month follow up her Modified Rankin Scale was 0. We demonstrated a successful reperfusion and excellent clinical recovery with intravenous thrombolysis in a patient who presented with a wake-up stroke with underlying valvular atrial fibrillation despite evidence of large vessel occlusion. © 2018, Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. All rights reserved

    Evaluating improvement in acute stroke management following pre-hospital initiation of acute stroke service

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    Prehospital notification of the stroke team in alerting incoming acute stroke patient has been practiced in several countries worldwide. Currently this is not practiced in Malaysia. This study evaluates feasibility and impact to stroke team door to review time when prehospital notification is employed. Duration of case control study was between June 2018 to January 2019. Control phase consists of conventionally activating stroke team after in-hospital assessment by emergency medical officer. This was then followed by an intervention phase where on scene activation of stroke team was done by the Prehospital Emergency Care (PHC) staff. Training of PHC staff in recognising an acute stroke was based on identification of BE-FAST (Balance, Eyes, Face, Arm and Speech Test) abnormalities. The objectives were to compare the mean between two groups for acute stroke team review time, door to computerised tomography (CT) scan and door to thrombolysis time. Thirty-nine patients were analysed (control n=29, intervention n=10). Results were insignificant (p>0.05). Mean time in minutes for control phase vs. intervention phase was as follows: Door to stroke team review time, 25.96 + 39.16 vs. 15.9 + 13.14, door to CT scan was 43.04 + 40.00 vs. 25.8 + 11.35. Only 3 patients underwent thrombolytic therapy during study period. Limitation was non-parametric data with lack of number of acute stroke cases responded during the intervention period. With continual training of pre-hospital staff in detecting acute stroke, feasibility can be improved

    Brain Dynamics in Response to Intermittent Photic Stimulation in Epilepsy

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    Purpose: Routine electroencephalogram (EEG) examinations uses intermittent photic stimulation (IPS) for investigation of the visual cortex EEG responses during resting time. This study aimed to discover brain dynamics effects of IPS in 28 generalized epilepsy patients and 28 healthy subjects. Methodology: Signal processing techniques were used in feature extraction by Fast Fourier transform (FFT), feature dimension reduction by t-test (significant, p<0.05) and classification by nearest neighbor (k-NN) and support vector machine (SVM). Results: The epilepsy group had higher level of amplitude in Theta waves compared to the healthy group. The Alpha waves in the resting time and for all IPS frequencies were observed with lower level of amplitude in healthy subjects compared to the epilepsy group. The k-NN (85.7% accuracy) classifier had the best discrimination of epilepsy from healthy group for resting time versus during IPS at 18 Hz IPS. However, using SVM (75.0% accuracy), IPS at 25 Hz yielded the best discrimination between resting time versus IPS in epilepsy where the healthy group responded similarly in all IPS frequencies. Conclusions: This study shows that IPS at 18 Hz and 25 Hz are suitable IPS frequencies for k-NN and SVM, respectively, to discriminate non-photosensitive generalized epilepsy from normal subjects during interictal

    Assessment of a 16-Channel Ambulatory Dry Electrode EEG for Remote Monitoring

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    Ambulatory EEGs began emerging in the healthcare industry over the years, setting a new norm for long-term monitoring services. The present devices in the market are neither meant for remote monitoring due to their technical complexity nor for meeting clinical setting needs in epilepsy patient monitoring. In this paper, we propose an ambulatory EEG device, OptiEEG, that has low setup complexity, for the remote EEG monitoring of epilepsy patients. OptiEEG’s signal quality was compared with a gold standard clinical device, Natus. The experiment between OptiEEG and Natus included three different tests: eye open/close (EOC); hyperventilation (HV); and photic stimulation (PS). Statistical and wavelet analysis of retrieved data were presented when evaluating the performance of OptiEEG. The SNR and PSNR of OptiEEG were slightly lower than Natus, but within an acceptable bound. The standard deviations of MSE for both devices were almost in a similar range for the three tests. The frequency band energy analysis is consistent between the two devices. A rhythmic slowdown of theta and delta was observed in HV, whereas photic driving was observed during PS in both devices. The results validated the performance of OptiEEG as an acceptable EEG device for remote monitoring away from clinical environments

    Knowledge of Acute Stroke Management Among Healthcare Professionals: Development and Validation of Acute Stroke Management Questionnaire (ASMaQ)

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    Background: Around 15.0% of all strokes occurred in hospitalised patients and studies showed significant delay in the stroke recognition and lack of awareness on thrombolytic therapy for acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) which lead to higher mortality for in-hospital stroke. We aimed to develop and validate a new instrument known as acute stroke management questionnaire (ASMaQ) to evaluate the awareness of healthcare professionals in managing acute ischaemic stroke cases. Methods: This study consisted of 3 steps; the formulation of ASMaQ draft, content validation and construct validity. A total of 110 questions were drafted with 5-point Likert scale answers. From the list, 31 were selected and subsequently tested on 158 participants. The results were analysed and validated using exploratory factor analysis on SPSS. Components were extracted and questions with low factor loading were removed. The internal consistency was then measured with Cronbach’s alpha. Results: Following analysis, 3 components were extracted and named as general stroke knowledge, hyperacute stroke care and advanced stroke management. Two items were deleted leaving 29 out of 31 questions for the final validated ASMaQ. Internal consistency showed high reliability with Cronbach’s alpha of 0.82. Our respondents scored a total cumulative mean of 113.62 marks or 66.6%. A sub analysis by occupation showed that medical assistants scored the lowest in the group with a score of 57% whilst specialists including neurologists scored the highest at 79.4%. Conclusion: The ASMaQ is a newly developed and validated questionnaire consisting of 29 questions testing the respondents’ acute stroke management knowledge

    Direct Medical Cost of Stroke and the Cost-Effectiveness of Direct Oral Anticoagulants in Atrial Fibrillation-Related Stroke: A Cross-Sectional Study

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    Background: Stroke has significant direct medical costs, and direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are better alternatives to warfarin for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation (AF). This study aimed to determine the direct medical costs of stroke, with emphasis on AF stroke and the cost-effectiveness of DOACs among stroke patients in a tertiary hospital in Malaysia. Methods: This study utilised in-patient data from the case mix unit of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre (UKMMC) between 2011 and 2018. Direct medical costs of stroke were determined using a top-down costing approach and factors associated with costs were identified. Incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER) was calculated to compare the cost-effectiveness between DOACs and warfarin. Results: The direct medical cost of stroke was MYR 11,669,414.83 (n = 3689). AF-related stroke cases had higher median cost of MYR 2839.73 (IQR 2269.79–3101.52). Regression analysis showed that stroke type (AF versus non-AF stroke) (p = 0.013), stroke severity (p = 0.010) and discharge status (p < 0.001) significantly influenced stroke costs. DOACs were cost-effective compared to warfarin with an ICER of MYR 19.25. Conclusions: The direct medical cost of stroke is substantial, with AF-stroke having a higher median cost per stroke care. DOACs were cost effective in the treatment of AF-related stroke in UKMMC

    Current Update on the Clinical Utility of MMSE and MoCA for Stroke Patients in Asia: A Systematic Review

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    Objective: Primary care clinicians in Asia employed the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) to aid dementia diagnosis post-stroke. Recent studies questioned their clinical utility in stroke settings for relying on verbal abilities and education level, as well as lack of consideration for aphasia and neglect. We aimed to review the clinical utility of the MMSE and MoCA for stroke patients in Asia and provide recommendations for clinical practice. Methods: PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Science Direct were searched for relevant articles. Included studies were assessed for risk of bias. RevMan 5.4 was used for data synthesis (sensitivity and specificity) and covariates were identified. Results: Among the 48 full-text articles reviewed, 11 studies were included with 3735 total subjects; of these studies, 7 (77%) were conducted in China, 3 (27%) in Singapore, and 1 (9%) in South Korea. Both the MMSE and MoCA generally showed adequate sensitivity and specificity. Education was identified as a covariate that significantly affected detection accuracy. Due to heterogeneity in cutoff scores, methodologies, and languages, it was not feasible to suggest a single cutoff score. One additional point is recommended for MoCA for patients with <6 years of education. Conclusion: Clinicians in Asia are strongly recommended to consider the education level of stroke patients when interpreting the results of the MMSE and MoCA. Further studies in other Asian countries are needed to understand their clinical value in stroke settings
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