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    In: Stroke, Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), Vol. 46, No. suppl_1 ( 2015-02)
    Abstract: Background: The frequency of wake-up Intracerebral Hemorrhage (WU-ICH) is uncertain. It is also unknown whether there are clinical, radiological and prognostic differences between WU-ICH and non-WU-ICH. We assessed the hypothesis that both types of ICH do not differ. Methods: This is a multicentre (n=6 tertiary hospitals) registry of consecutive patients with ICH. We collected the following variables: Time of onset. WU onset was defined as stroke detected on awakening, independently of the time of the day; Demographics (age, sex); Traditional vascular risk factors; Severity of the neurological deficit at admission (NIHSS score and/or Glasgow coma scale score -GCS-); Neurological deterioration (decrease in 〉 1 point in GCS and/or increase in 〉 3 points in NIHSS score); Etiology; Neuroimaging at admission (location, secondary intraventricular hemorrhage, hematoma volume); Blood pressure, blood glucose, platelet count and INR at admission; and Outcome (modified Rankin scale score -mRS- at discharge and at 3 months; favourable outcome when mRS ≤ 2). Patients were treated according to national guidelines of ICH. Comparison between groups was achieved with Student’s t-test, Chi-square test and Mann-Whitney’s U test. Results: We included a total of 270 patients, whose mean age was 70.2 ± 14.4 years, and 60% of them were men. WU-ICH was diagnosed in 49 (18%) patients. We found no significant differences between groups in demographics, frequency of vascular risk factors, severity of the neurological deficit, etiology, blood pressure, blood analysis and neuroradiological findings. Patients with WU-ICH had a lower frequency of neurological deterioration when assessed by the NIHSS scale (p= 0.04) but not by the GCS scale. The outcome at discharge and at 3-months was equivalent between groups. Conclusions: In conclusion, 18% of ICHs are detected on awakening. Patients with wake-up ICH do not differ from patients with known onset time either in most clinical and radiological variables or in the long-term prognosis. WU-ICH patients may have a lower likelihood of neurological worsening within the acute stage.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0039-2499 , 1524-4628
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
    Publication Date: 2015
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80381-9
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1467823-8
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