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A significant proportion of patients with acute stroke symptoms have an alternative 'mimic' diagnosis. A narrative review was carried out to explore the frequency, characteristics and aetiology of stroke mimics. Prehospital and thrombolysis-treated patients were described separately. Overall, 9972 studies were identified from the initial search and 79 studies were included with a median stroke mimic rate of 19% (range: 1-64%). The prehospital median was 27% (range: 4-43%) and the thrombolysis median 10% (range: 1-25%). Seizures, migraines and psychiatric disorders are the most frequently reported causes of stroke mimics. Several characteristics are consistently associated with stroke mimics; however, they do not fully exclude the possibility of stroke. Nineteen per cent of suspected stroke patients had a mimic condition. Stroke mimics were more common with younger age and female sex. The range of mimic diagnoses, a lack of clear differentiating characteristics and the short treatment window for ischaemic stroke create challenges for early identification.
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Graham McClelland
Northumbria University
Helen Rodgers
National Health Service
Darren Flynn
Northumbria University
European Journal of Emergency Medicine
Newcastle University
North East Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust
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McClelland et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a17063e0f965e9c137be1f5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1097/mej.0000000000000550