Effects of COVID-19 pandemic on acute ischemic stroke care – A single-centre retrospective analysis of medical collateral damage

In this report from Budapest, Hungary, the authors compared several clinical features (including time parameters, rate of intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular therapies) of patients admitted to a university stroke-unit within a 2-month COVID-pandemic period (March and April of 2020) with an identical pre-COVID period of 2019.

In this report from Budapest, Hungary, the authors compared several clinical features (including time parameters, rate of intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular therapies) of patients admitted to a university stroke-unit within a 2-month COVID-pandemic period (March and April of 2020) with an identical pre-COVID period of 2019. In the COVID-period, admissions for acute ischaemic stroke decreased by 11%, mean onset-to-treatment time of thrombolysis increased by 20 minutes, and rate of late admissions (beyond 24 hours after stroke) increased by 13% compared to 2019. Moreover, whereas the rate of endovascular interventions remained unchanged (8%), the rate of intravenous thrombolysis decreased from 26% to 16%. To explain these findings, the COVID-pandemic itself and related out-of-hospital factors might have had a leading role.

https://doi.org/10.1556/650.2020.31936