Diurnal Variations in the First 24/7 Mobile Stroke Unit

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Abstract

Background and Purpose-Mobile Stroke Units (MSUs) provide innovative prehospital stroke care but their 24/7 operation has not been studied. Our study investigates 24/7 MSU diurnal variations related to transport frequency, patient characteristics, and stroke treatments. Methods-We compared transportation frequency, demographics, thrombolytic and mechanical thrombectomy administration, and treatment metrics across 8-hour shifts (morning, evening, and nocturnal) from our 24/7 MSU in Northwest Ohio prospective database. Results-One hundred ninety-five patients were transported by the MSU. Most transports occurred during the morning shift (52.3%) followed by evening shift (35.8%) and nocturnal shift (11.9%; Ptrend<0.001). Twenty-three patients (11.9%) received intravenous thrombolytic in the MSU, most frequently in the morning shift (56.5%). No cases of mechanical thrombectomy were performed on MSU patients in the nocturnal shift. Conclusions-Morning and evening shifts account for the majority of our MSU transports (88.1%) and therapeutic interventions. Understanding temporal variations in a resource-intensive MSU is critical to its worldwide implementation.

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APA

Zaidat, O. O., Changal, K. H., Sultan-Qurraie, A., De Havenon, A., Calderon, V. J., Goins-Whitmore, J., … Lin, E. (2019). Diurnal Variations in the First 24/7 Mobile Stroke Unit. Stroke, 50(7), 1911–1914. https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.119.024950

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