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Comparisons of Prehospital Delay and Related Factors Between Acute Ischemic Stroke and Acute Myocardial Infarction

Authors :
Cindy W. Yoon
Hoonji Oh
Juneyoung Lee
Joung‐Ho Rha
Seong‐Ill Woo
Won Kyung Lee
Han‐Young Jung
Byeolnim Ban
Jihoon Kang
Beom Joon Kim
Won‐Seok Kim
Chang‐Hwan Yoon
Heeyoung Lee
Seongheon Kim
Sung Hun Kim
Eun Kyoung Kang
Ae‐Young Her
Jae‐Kwan Cha
Dae‐Hyun Kim
Moo‐Hyun Kim
Jang Hoon Lee
Hun Sik Park
Keonyeop Kim
Rock Bum Kim
Nack‐Cheon Choi
Jinyong Hwang
Hyun‐Woong Park
Ki Soo Park
SangHak Yi
Jae Young Cho
Nam‐Ho Kim
Kang‐Ho Choi
Yongcheol Kim
Juhan Kim
Jae‐Young Han
Jay Chol Choi
Song‐Yi Kim
Joon‐Hyouk Choi
Jei Kim
Sung Ju Jee
Min Kyun Sohn
Si Wan Choi
Dong‐Ick Shin
Sang Yeub Lee
Jang‐Whan Bae
Kunsei Lee
Hee‐Joon Bae
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association. 11
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundPrehospital delay is an important contributor to poor outcomes in both acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and acute myocardial infarction (AMI). We aimed to compare the prehospital delay and related factors between AIS and AMI.Methods and ResultsWe identified patients with AIS and AMI who were admitted to the 11 Korean Regional Cardiocerebrovascular Centers via the emergency room between July 2016 and December 2018. Delayed arrival was defined as a prehospital delay of >3 hours, and the generalized linear mixed‐effects model was applied to explore the effects of potential predictors on delayed arrival. This study included 17 895 and 8322 patients with AIS and AMI, respectively. The median value of prehospital delay was 6.05 hours in AIS and 3.00 hours in AMI. The use of emergency medical services was the key determinant of delayed arrival in both groups. Previous history, 1‐person household, weekday presentation, and interhospital transfer had higher odds of delayed arrival in both groups. Age and sex had no or minimal effects on delayed arrival in AIS; however, age and female sex were associated with higher odds of delayed arrival in AMI. More severe symptoms had lower odds of delayed arrival in AIS, whereas no significant effect was observed in AMI. Off‐hour presentation had higher and prehospital awareness had lower odds of delayed arrival; however, the magnitude of their effects differed quantitatively between AIS and AMI.ConclusionsThe effects of some nonmodifiable and modifiable factors on prehospital delay differed between AIS and AMI. A differentiated strategy might be required to reduce prehospital delay.

Details

ISSN :
20479980
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....99b217b45a842c4f9e54c9b6fa46d148