Neurological Research and Practice (Jan 2023)

Echocardiography in acute stroke patients: a nationwide analysis in departments with certified stroke units in Germany

  • Timolaos Rizos,
  • Ekkehart Jenetzky,
  • Darius Günther Nabavi,
  • Karl Georg Haeusler,
  • Rolf Wachter,
  • Martin Ossenbrink,
  • Peter Arthur Ringleb,
  • Otto Busse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42466-022-00229-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Echocardiography is highly relevant in patients with ischemic stroke or TIA. Utilization of routine echocardiographic examinations [transthoracic (TTE) or transesophageal (TEE)] on stroke units remains however unknown. To representatively examine echocardiographic rates on stroke units in Germany and to evaluate structural factors that may influence the decision to conduct echocardiography. Methods A nationwide analysis was performed by using certification audit data of all primary and comprehensive stroke centers (pSC and cSC) in Germany. Results Structural and organizational requirements of 310 departments (cSCs: 42.6%) were extracted. Median TTE rate was 63.3% (IQR 39.3–80.8), median TEE rate 21.3% (IQR 16.4–29.5). A cardiological department on site was present in 74.2%, and they were associated with higher TEE rates. TTE rates decreased with increasing numbers of patients (p = 0.026). Likewise, TEE rates decreased with increasing numbers of patients (p = 0.006), mediated by departments with cSCs (p = 0.008 for cSCs vs p = 0.230 for pSCs). TTE rates were far more inhomogeneously distributed than TEE rates and higher in pSCs (p = 0.011). Overall, 12.9% of centers did not perform any echocardiographic examination in at least 50% of all stroke patients. Conclusion More detailed recommendations regarding echocardiography should be included in future guidelines. Moreover, evaluating the impact of echocardiographic examinations on long-term prognosis in stroke patients should be focus of further evaluations.

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