Abstract
Background and Purpose:
Stroke mimics constitute a good number of patients referred as acute strokes within the window period for acute therapies. Proper triaging can avoid unnecessary imaging and even thrombolytic therapies in these patients. This study looked at the etiological spectrum of acute stroke mimics presenting within the 4.5 hours therapeutic window. We also evaluated the FAST, BE FAST, and the ROSIER tools in picking true strokes.
Methods:
Prospective study conducted over a 2-year period.
Results:
Acute stroke mimics constituted 328/1635 (20%) of referrals for acute stroke after screening by the neurology stroke team. Focal and generalized seizures with transient weakness and peripheral vertigo were the commonest acute stroke mimics; followed by metabolic causes and psychiatric disorders. Females were more in the stroke mimic group (
Conclusions:
Acute stroke mimics can constitute up to 20% of cases evaluated as acute strokes by neurology stroke teams. None of the triaging tools appear to have enough accuracy. A proper history and clinical examination should be given priority over fixed protocols whenever acute stroke mimic are suspected especially before administering acute costly interventions. Auditing stroke mimics is important to improve acute stroke pathways.
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