Seungmin Shin, Young Woo Kim, Seung Hun Sheen, Sukh Que Park, Sung-Chul Jin, Jin Pyeong Jeon, Ji Young Lee, Boung Chul Lee, Young Wha Lim, Gui Ok Kim, Jae Sang Oh
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Korea's healthcare system and policy promotes early, actively stroke treatment to improve prognosis. This study represents stroke epidemiology and outcomes in Korea.
Methods: This study investigated data from the Acute Stroke Assessment Registry. The registry collects data from over 220 hospitals nationwide, focusing on quality stroke service management. Data analysis included patient demographics, stroke severity assessment, and discharge prognosis measurement using standardized scales.
Results: 86,568 acute stroke patients were collected with demographic and clinical characteristics during 18 months from 2016 to 2021, focusing on acute subarachnoid hemorrhage, acute intracerebral hemorrhage, and acute ischemic stroke. Of these 86,568 patients, 8.3% was subarachnoid hemorrhage, 16.3% intracerebral hemorrhage, and 74.9% ischemic stroke. Trends showed decreasing subarachnoid hemorrhage and increasing intracerebral hemorrhage cases over the years. 68.3% stroke patients had the clear onset time. 49.6 % stroke patients arrived within 4.5 hours of symptom onset, with more treated at general hospitals. Good functional outcomes at discharge was obtained with 58.3% of acute stroke patients, 55.9% of subarachnoid hemorrhage patients, 34.6% of intracerebral hemorrhage patients, and 63.8% of ischemic stroke patients.
Conclusion: The results showed that ischemic stroke was the most common subtype, followed by intracerebral hemorrhage and subarachnoid hemorrhage. Prognosis differed among subtypes, with favorable outcomes more common in ischemic stroke and subarachnoid hemorrhage compared to intracerebral hemorrhage.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society (J Korean Neurosurg Soc) is the official journal of the Korean Neurosurgical Society, and published bimonthly (1st day of January, March, May, July, September, and November). It launched in October 31, 1972 with Volume 1 and Number 1. J Korean Neurosurg Soc aims to allow neurosurgeons from around the world to enrich their knowledge of patient management, education, and clinical or experimental research, and hence their professionalism. This journal publishes Laboratory Investigations, Clinical Articles, Review Articles, Case Reports, Technical Notes, and Letters to the Editor. Our field of interest involves clinical neurosurgery (cerebrovascular disease, neuro-oncology, skull base neurosurgery, spine, pediatric neurosurgery, functional neurosurgery, epilepsy, neuro-trauma, and peripheral nerve disease) and laboratory work in neuroscience.