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Specialty: General Medicine
Countries: Australia Health

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Total 113 results found since Jan 2013.

Activity monitors for increasing physical activity in adult stroke survivors.
CONCLUSIONS: Only four small RCTs with 274 participants (three in inpatient rehabilitation and one in the community) have examined the efficacy of activity monitors for increasing physical activity after stroke. Although these studies showed activity monitors could be incorporated into practice, there is currently not enough evidence to support the use of activity monitors to increase physical activity after stroke. PMID: 30051462 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - July 27, 2018 Category: General Medicine Authors: Lynch EA, Jones TM, Simpson DB, Fini NA, Kuys SS, Borschmann K, Kramer S, Johnson L, Callisaya ML, Mahendran N, Janssen H, English C, ACTIOnS Collaboration Tags: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Source Type: research

Improving acute stroke care in regional hospitals: clinical evaluation of the Victorian Stroke Telemedicine program.
CONCLUSIONS: Telemedicine has provided Victorian regional hospitals access to expert care for emergency department patients with suspected acute stroke. Eligible patients with ischaemic stroke are now receiving stroke thrombolysis more quickly and safely. PMID: 32255520 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Medical Journal of Australia - April 8, 2020 Category: General Medicine Tags: Med J Aust Source Type: research

Risk-adjusted hospital mortality rates for stroke: evidence from the Australian Stroke Clinical Registry (AuSCR).
CONCLUSIONS: Hospital stroke mortality rates and hospital performance ranking may vary widely according to the covariates included in the statistical analysis. PMID: 28446116 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Medical Journal of Australia - April 29, 2017 Category: Journals (General) Tags: Med J Aust Source Type: research

Access to rehabilitation for patients with stroke in Australia.
CONCLUSIONS: Access to stroke units and to early and ongoing rehabilitation for patients after stroke can be improved in Australia, both to optimise outcomes and to reduce the burden of care on underresourced community and primary care providers. PMID: 30636312 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Med J Aust - January 1, 2019 Category: General Medicine Authors: Lynch EA, Mackintosh S, Luker JA, Hillier SL Tags: Med J Aust Source Type: research

Differences in stroke risk and cardiovascular mortality for Aboriginal and other Australian patients with atrial fibrillation.
CONCLUSION: Stroke risk and cardiovascular mortality are markedly higher for Aboriginal than non-Aboriginal patients with atrial fibrillation, particularly for patients under 60. Strategies for providing evidence-based therapies and cardiovascular prevention to Aboriginal people with atrial fibrillation must be improved. PMID: 32030754 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Medical Journal of Australia - February 8, 2020 Category: General Medicine Tags: Med J Aust Source Type: research

Differences in the pre-hospital management of women and men with stroke by emergency medical services in New South Wales
CONCLUSION: Our large population-based study identified sex differences in pre-hospital management by emergency medical services of women and men admitted to hospital with stroke. Paramedics should receive training that improves the recognition of stroke symptoms in women.PMID:35831059 | DOI:10.5694/mja2.51652
Source: Medical Journal of Australia - July 13, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Xia Wang Cheryl Carcel Benjumin Hsu Sultana Shajahan Matthew Miller Sanne Peters Deborah A Randall Alys Havard Julie Redfern Craig S Anderson Louisa Jorm Mark Woodward Source Type: research

Real-world, feasibility study to investigate the use of a multidisciplinary app (Pulsara) to improve prehospital communication and timelines for acute stroke/STEMI care
Conclusions In this Australian-first study, uptake of the digital communication app was strong, patient-centred care timelines improved, although door-to-treatment times remained similar.
Source: BMJ Open - July 18, 2022 Category: General Medicine Authors: Bladin, C. F., Bagot, K. L., Vu, M., Kim, J., Bernard, S., Smith, K., Hocking, G., Coupland, T., Pearce, D., Badcock, D., Budge, M., Nadurata, V., Pearce, W., Hall, H., Kelly, B., Spencer, A., Chapman, P., Oqueli, E., Sahathevan, R., Kraemer, T., Hair, C. Tags: Open access, Communication Source Type: research

Intensive blood pressure reduction with intravenous thrombolysis therapy for acute ischaemic stroke (ENCHANTED): an international, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint, phase 3 trial
Publication date: Available online 7 February 2019Source: The LancetAuthor(s): Craig S Anderson, Yining Huang, Richard I Lindley, Xiaoying Chen, Hisatomi Arima, Guofang Chen, Qiang Li, Laurent Billot, Candice Delcourt, Philip M Bath, Joseph P Broderick, Andrew M Demchuk, Geoffrey A Donnan, Alice C Durham, Pablo M Lavados, Tsong-Hai Lee, Christopher Levi, Sheila O Martins, Veronica V Olavarria, Jeyaraj D PandianSummaryBackgroundSystolic blood pressure of more than 185 mm Hg is a contraindication to thrombolytic treatment with intravenous alteplase in patients with acute ischaemic stroke, but the target systolic blood pressu...
Source: The Lancet - February 8, 2019 Category: General Medicine Source Type: research

Advances in stroke medicine.
Authors: Campbell BC Abstract In recent years, reperfusion therapies such as intravenous thrombolysis and endovascular thrombectomy for ischaemic stroke have dramatically reduced disability and revolutionised stroke management. Thrombolysis with alteplase is effective when administered to patients with potentially disabling stroke, who are not at high risk of bleeding, within 4.5 hours of the time the patient was last known to be well. Emerging evidence suggests that other thrombolytics such as tenecteplase may be even more effective. Treatment may be possible beyond 4.5 hours in patients selected using brain imagi...
Source: Medical Journal of Australia - May 6, 2019 Category: General Medicine Tags: Med J Aust Source Type: research

Interventions for the uptake of evidence-based recommendations in acute stroke settings
CONCLUSIONS: We are uncertain whether a multifaceted implementation intervention compared to no intervention improves adherence to evidence-based recommendations in acute stroke settings, because the certainty of evidence is very low.PMID:37565934 | DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD012520.pub2
Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews - August 11, 2023 Category: General Medicine Authors: Elizabeth A Lynch Lemma N Bulto Heilok Cheng Louise Craig Julie A Luker Kathleen L Bagot Tharshanah Thayabaranathan Heidi Janssen Elizabeth McInnes Sandy Middleton Dominique A Cadilhac Source Type: research

Family-led rehabilitation after stroke in India (ATTEND): a randomised controlled trial
Publication date: Available online 27 June 2017 Source:The Lancet Author(s): The ATTEND Collaborative GroupR ILindleyC SAndersonLBillotAForsterM LHackettL AHarveySJanQLiHLiuPLanghorneP KMaulikG V SMurthyM FWalkerJ DPandianMAlimCFelixASyrigapuD KTugnawatS JVermaB RShamannaGHankeyJBernhardtM MMehndirattaLJeyaseelanPDonnellyDByrneSSteleyVSanthoshSChilappagariJMysoreJRoyM VPadmaLJohnSAaronN CBorahPVijayaSKaulDKhuranaP NSylajaD SHalprashanthB KMadhusudhanVNambiarSSureshbabuM CKhannaG SNarangDChakrabortyS SChakrabortyBBiswasSKauraHKoundalPSinghAAndriasD SThambuIRamyaJGeorgeA TPrabhakarPKirubakaranPAnbalaganMGhoseKBordoloiPGohai...
Source: The Lancet - June 28, 2017 Category: General Medicine Source Type: research