Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States of America.
Department of Neurology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, United States of America.
Am J Emerg Med. 2023 Dec;74:95-99. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2023.09.046. Epub 2023 Sep 29.
Recognition of stroke by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) is critical to initiate rapid emergency department treatment. Most prehospital stroke screening tools rely heavily on presentation with the classic symptoms of facial droop, speech changes, unilateral weakness. However, women may be less likely to present with classic symptoms and may also have different distributions of stroke by anatomical location. This study seeks to determine the association between biological sex, presentation with classic symptoms, and the location of the infarcted tissue.
This is a retrospective cohort study. Data from electronic health records were extracted for patients with acute ischemic stroke who presented via EMS to a single Comprehensive Stroke Center between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2020. We used descriptive statistics characterize the cohort. Multivariable logistic regression identified factors associated with classic symptom presentation (facial droop, speech changes, and/or unilateral weakness). Biological sex, location of the infarct, stroke etiology, age and the interaction between sex and infarct location were assessed as covariates.
There were 364 (58.6%) males and 257 (41.1%) females with an acute ischemic stroke included in this study. EMS documented one or more classic symptoms in 125 (72.3%) males and 161 (67.9%) females. There were no baseline differences in infarct location or presentation with classic symptoms as documented by EMS comparing males and females. Multivariate logistic regression found no association between biological sex and presentation with classic symptoms (Odds Ratio 1.08; 95% CI 0.58 to 1.55) after controlling for age, stroke location, etiology of stroke or the interaction between sex and infarct location. Presence of an anterior circulation infarct compared to posterior circulation infarct was positively associated with a classic presentation to EMS (Odds Ratio 3.41; 95% CI 2.15 to 5.41).
This study found no difference in the frequency of patient presentation with classic stroke symptoms based on biological sex alone, nor a significant different in distribution of infarcts between males and females. Infarct location (i.e., involving the anterior circulation) was associated with a classic presentation. This suggests that the likelihood of presenting with classic stroke symptoms is not influenced by sex, but rather the location of the infarct.
急救医疗服务(EMS)对脑卒中的识别对于启动快速急诊治疗至关重要。大多数院前脑卒中筛查工具严重依赖于具有典型症状的表现,如面部下垂、言语改变、单侧无力。然而,女性可能不太可能出现典型症状,并且脑卒中的解剖位置分布也可能不同。本研究旨在确定生物性别、表现出典型症状以及梗死组织的位置之间的关联。
这是一项回顾性队列研究。从 2018 年 1 月 1 日至 2020 年 12 月 31 日期间,通过单一综合卒中中心的 EMS 就诊的急性缺血性卒中患者的电子健康记录中提取数据。我们使用描述性统计方法对队列进行特征描述。多变量逻辑回归确定与经典症状表现相关的因素(面部下垂、言语改变和/或单侧无力)。生物性别、梗死部位、卒中病因、年龄以及性别与梗死部位之间的相互作用被评估为协变量。
本研究共纳入 364 名(58.6%)男性和 257 名(41.1%)女性急性缺血性卒中患者。EMS 记录了 125 名(72.3%)男性和 161 名(67.9%)女性的一个或多个典型症状。在男性和女性中,EMS 记录的梗死部位或表现出的经典症状方面没有基线差异。多变量逻辑回归发现,在控制年龄、卒中部位、卒中病因或性别与梗死部位之间的相互作用后,生物性别与表现出经典症状之间没有关联(比值比 1.08;95%置信区间 0.58 至 1.55)。与后循环梗死相比,前循环梗死与 EMS 表现出经典表现呈正相关(比值比 3.41;95%置信区间 2.15 至 5.41)。
本研究发现,仅基于生物性别,患者表现出经典卒中症状的频率没有差异,男性和女性之间的梗死分布也没有显著差异。梗死部位(即涉及前循环)与经典表现相关。这表明出现经典卒中症状的可能性不受性别影响,而是受梗死部位影响。