The Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project is a prospective study of all new cases of stroke transient ischaemic attack in a defined population of about 103,000 patients registered with 49 general practitioners; every case is assessed by a neurologist and most patients undergo a CT scan or are examined post mortem, or both, to ensure accurate diagnosis. Out of 404 cases registered in the first year, 168 patients had suffered a first stroke, 52 a recurrent stroke, and 41 a transient ischaemic attack; 143 were excluded. Of the 168 patients with their first stroke, 153 (91%) were seen by a neurologist and 149 (89%) had a CT scan or came to necropsy. The pathological diagnosis was cerebral infarction in 127 cases (76%), intracranial haemorrhage in 22 (13%), and unknown in 19 (11%). The estimated yearly incidence of first stroke was 1.95/1000 population (age adjusted to 1981 population of England and Wales).
CITATION STYLE
Sandercock, P. A. G., Warlow, C. P., & Price, S. M. (1983). Incidence of stroke in Oxfordshire: First year’s experience of a community stroke register. Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project. British Medical Journal, 287(6394), 713–717.
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