Timely treatment in stroke and TIA

Abstract: In acute stroke, the effect of both acute treatments and secondary prevention is timedependent. Patients´ delay is an important obstacle to acute recanalization therapy for stroke. To decrease this delay, a stroke educational campaign was carried out in Sweden. After an ischemic event, the risk of early recurrent stroke is particularly high if the event is caused by a carotid stenosis. Urgent carotid endarterectomy (CEA) reduce the risk of recurrent stroke, but the optimal timing for CEA after a cerebrovascular event is not known because of uncertainties with respect to the procedural risk in very urgent CEA. The aim of this thesis was to investigate the effects of the stroke campaign, and to investigate the procedural risk of very urgent CEA. Study I, a study based on telephone interviews, evaluated public stroke knowledge and intent to call 112 before the stroke campaign. Seventy-two percent could report at least one stroke symptom and 65% indicated they would call 112 for stroke. Study II, a study based on telephone interviews, investigated the effect of the campaign on awareness of the AKUT (equivalent to the FAST, Face-Arm-Speech- Time) test and intent to call 112. Before the campaign started, 15% had heard about the AKUT test, compared with 51% during and directly after the campaign, and 50% 21 months later. Corresponding figures were 65%, 76% and 73% for intent to call 112. Study III, a prospective national study, evaluated the effect of the campaign on prehospital delay and recanalization therapy rate. During the campaign, but not the year before, nor the year after, the proportion arriving at hospital within three hours from stroke onset and the proportion receiving recanalization therapy increased significantly. Study IV, a prospective controlled study, compared the procedural risk in patients undergoing CEA < 48 hours with CEA 2-14 days from an ischemic event. Patients undergoing CEA < 48 hours from symptom onset had a higher risk of complications (stroke and/or death) compared with those operated on later, 8.0% versus 2.9%. In conclusion, public awareness of stroke was rather low in Sweden and was increased by the Swedish National Stroke Campaign. The campaign was also associated with a sustained increase in the proportion receiving recanalization therapy and with a small improvement of the proportion arriving at hospital within three hours. CEA < 48 hours was associated with a higher procedural risk compared with surgery 2-14 days after an ischemic event.

  This dissertation MIGHT be available in PDF-format. Check this page to see if it is available for download.