4.5 Article

Prevalence of stroke in acute vertigo presentations: A UK tertiary stroke centre perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 442, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jns.2022.120416

Keywords

Stroke; Dizziness; Vertigo; Imbalance; Nystagmus; Vestibular neuritis; Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

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This study found a high prevalence of stroke among patients with acute vestibular syndrome, but due to delays in diagnosis, none of the vestibular stroke cases received timely treatment.
The reported prevalence of stroke amongst patients presenting to hospital with acute vertigo and/or imbalance is c. 5%, leading to the pervasive notion amongst emergency and stroke physicians, that stroke is uncommon in this cohort.To interrogate the veracity of this notion, we systematically and retrospectively screened the electronic care records in our institution of patients referred as suspected stroke, to a hyperacute stroke service at a large tertiary referral centre.We screened 24,310 consecutive patients' electronic case records presenting to our hospital as an emergency over a 4-month period, 332 of whom were referred as suspected stroke whose case records were assessed via structured review. Of these 332 cases, 61 presented with a vestibular syndrome, i.e. having at least one of imbalance, dizziness or vertigo. Of the 61 vestibular cases, 38 (62%) were diagnosed as stroke confirmed by imaging in 25/38 or upon clinical grounds only (13/38). None of the 38 vestibular stroke cases received thrombolysis or thrombectomy treatment.In a UK urban population (2.5mn), acute vestibular syndrome cases referred to stroke services have a 50% stroke prevalence. None of the vestibular stroke cases received hyperacute stroke treatment e.g., thrombolysis, due to delay in diagnosis. The high stroke prevalence in our cohort may indicate an excessively high threshold for referring acute vestibular cases for stroke, implying a high number of missed stroke cases. We suggest that early access to vestibular neurologists in acute vestibular cases should improve the proportion of vestibular stroke cases receiving definitive stroke treatment.

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