Abstract

With the proposed pathophysiologic mechanism of neurologic injury by SARS CoV-2, the frequency of stroke and henceforth the related hospital admissions were expected to rise. This paper investigated this presumption by comparing the frequency of admissions of stroke cases in Bangladesh before and during the pandemic. This is a retrospective analysis of stroke admissions in a 100-bed stroke unit at the National Institute of Neurosciences and Hospital (NINS&H) which is considerably a large stroke unit. All the admitted cases from 1 January to 30 June 2020 were considered. Poisson regression models were used to determine whether statistically significant changes in admission rates can be found before and after 25 March since when there is a surge in COVID-19 infections. A total of 1394 stroke patients took admission in the stroke unit during the study period. Half of the patients were older than 60 years, whereas only 2.6% were 30 years old or younger. The male to female ratio is 1.06:1. From January to March 2020, the mean rate of admission was 302.3 cases per month, which dropped to 162.3 cases per month from April to June, with an overall reduction of 46.3% in acute stroke admission per month. In those two periods, reductions in average admission per month for ischemic stroke (IST), intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and venous stroke (VS) were 45.5%, 37.2%, 71.4% and 39.0%, respectively. Based on weekly data, results of Poisson regressions confirm that the average number of admissions per week dropped significantly during the last three months of the sample period. Further, in the first three months, a total of 22 cases of hyperacute stroke management were done, whereas, in the last three months, there was an 86.4% reduction in the number of hyperacute stroke patients getting reperfusion treatment. Only 38 patients (2.7%) were later found to be RT-PCR SARS Cov-2 positive based on nasal swab testing. This study revealed a more than fifty percent reduction in acute stroke admission during the COVID-19 pandemic. Whether the reduction is related to the fear of getting infected by COVID-19 from hospitalization or the overall restriction on public movement or stay-home measures remains unknown.

Highlights

  • Though COVID was initially reported as a case of atypical pneumonia from Wuhan, China in December 2019, it was subsequently found to involve other systems as well, especially the nervous system [1, 2]

  • From January to March 2020, the mean rate of admission was 302.3 cases per month, which dropped to 162.3 cases per month from April to June, with an overall reduction of 46.3% in acute stroke admission per month

  • This study revealed a more than fifty percent reduction in acute stroke admission during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

Though COVID was initially reported as a case of atypical pneumonia from Wuhan, China in December 2019, it was subsequently found to involve other systems as well, especially the nervous system [1, 2]. While the pathogenesis of COVID-19-related hemorrhagic strokes is still not fully known, hypercoagulable state, vasculitis and cardiomyopathy had been suspected as potential pathogenic mechanisms for ischemic stroke in COVID-19 patients [10, 11]. COVID-19-related stroke patients were more likely to be older, hypertensive, and had a higher D-dimer level [13]. With the proposed pathophysiologic mechanism of neurologic injury by SARS CoV-2, the frequency of stroke and the related hospital admissions were expected to rise. This paper investigated this presumption by comparing the frequency of admissions of stroke cases in Bangladesh before and during the pandemic

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