Department of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California 92103-8466, USA.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2010 Nov-Dec;19(6):475-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2010.03.003. Epub 2010 Aug 17.
One-quarter of ischemic strokes occur during sleep, and affected patients are excluded from thrombolytic therapy because of an unknown time of stroke onset. It has been suggested that early ischemic changes detected on computed tomography (CT) are similar in patients with acute stroke and patients who recently awoke with stroke. We compared head CT scans using the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) in patients who were likely to suffer their stroke during sleep (awoke group) and a control group of patients with stroke of known onset time. Patients were recruited from a prospectively collected acute stroke database. The awoke group was defined as all ischemic stroke patients who were "last seen normal" more than 4 hours ago, arrived between 4 a.m. and 10 a.m., and underwent head CT within 15 hours of the time last seen normal. The control group was randomly selected from patients who underwent head CT within 4 hours of stroke onset. The ASPECTS evaluations were performed by investigators blinded to patient group and time of onset. A modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score was available in 15 awoke patients and 46 control patients at 90 days after stroke. Twenty-eight awoke patients and 68 control patients had suitable imaging for the ASPECTS. Baseline demographic characteristics and risk factors were similar in the 2 groups. The dichotomized ASPECTS analysis (≤7 vs 8-10) showed no significant differences between the groups. ASPECTS was 8-10 in 89.3% the awoke group and 95.6% in the control group (P=.353). There was a trend toward higher 90-day mRS score (0-1) in the awoke group versus controls (73% vs 45%; P=.079). Initial ASPECTS was similar in patients with wake-up stroke and those with 4 hours of symptoms. This suggests that a subset of wake-up stroke patients might be suitable for thrombolytic therapy.
四分之一的缺血性中风发生在睡眠中,由于中风发病时间未知,受影响的患者被排除在溶栓治疗之外。有人认为,在急性中风患者和最近醒来时中风的患者中,在计算机断层扫描 (CT) 上检测到的早期缺血性改变是相似的。我们比较了可能在睡眠中发生中风的患者(醒来组)和已知发病时间的中风患者的头部 CT 扫描,使用了 Alberta 中风计划早期 CT 评分 (ASPECTS)。患者从前瞻性收集的急性中风数据库中招募。醒来组定义为所有“最后一次正常”超过 4 小时、在上午 4 点至 10 点之间到达且在最后一次正常后 15 小时内进行头部 CT 的缺血性中风患者。对照组是从发病后 4 小时内进行头部 CT 的患者中随机选择的。ASPECTS 评估由对患者组和发病时间均不知情的研究人员进行。15 名醒来患者和 46 名对照组患者在中风后 90 天有改良 Rankin 量表 (mRS) 评分。28 名醒来患者和 68 名对照组患者有适合 ASPECTS 的影像学检查。两组的基线人口统计学特征和危险因素相似。两组之间的二分类 ASPECTS 分析(≤7 与 8-10)没有显著差异。醒来组的 ASPECTS 为 8-10 的占 89.3%,对照组为 95.6%(P=.353)。与对照组(73% vs 45%;P=.079)相比,醒来组 90 天 mRS 评分(0-1)较高的趋势。醒来组和 4 小时症状组患者的初始 ASPECTS 相似。这表明醒来组中风患者的亚组可能适合溶栓治疗。