Abstract
See related article, pages 909–914. “The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never simple”. —Oscar Wilde Sex differences in clinical care and outcomes have been documented in multiple studies of patients with coronary artery disease, with research showing differences in presentation, disparities in diagnosis and management, and worse clinical outcomes in women compared to men.1,2 There has been concern that similar sex differences exist in the care and outcomes of patients with stroke, given the parallels in patient populations and risk factors in individuals with cardiac and cerebrovascular disease. To date, however, the research on the interaction between gender and stroke has been limited and results have been inconsistent. Thus, any new information on this topic is welcome. In this issue of Stroke , Eriksson et al3 report on an analysis of 24 633 stroke events in 2006 from the large, well-designed, population-based Swedish National Quality Register (RIKS-Stroke). They found that compared to men, women were older (mean age difference 4.8 years) and were more often unconscious on presentation. No differences were found in processes of care such as administration of thrombolysis or discharge on anticoagulants. Women were more likely to develop deep venous thromboses and fractures, whereas men …
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