Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine (Aug 2019)

To tPA or Not to tPA: Two Medical-Legal Misadventures of Diagnosing a Cerebrovascular Accident as a Stroke Mimic

  • Malia J. Moore,
  • Jonathan Stuart,
  • Alexandra Humphreys,
  • James A. Pfaff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5811/cpcem.2019.4.42186
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3

Abstract

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We present two recent successfully litigated malpractice cases in which patients with cerebrovascular accidents were misdiagnosed as stroke mimics. The first was diagnosed as a hemiplegic migraine, which occurs in only 0.01% of the population. The second was diagnosed as a conversion disorder, which ultimately has a neurologic etiology in 4% of cases. In both cases, issues of poor patient communication and poor documentation were paramount in the legal outcome. We discuss caveats of stroke mimics, tissue plasminogen activator administration liability, and pitfalls in patient and family interactions.