Prevalence of sleep apnea at the acute phase of ischemic stroke with or without thrombolysis

2017 
Abstract Objective The aim of the study was to compare the prevalence, type, and severity of sleep apnea during the acute phase of ischemic stroke among patients either receiving or not receiving thrombolysis. Methods We recruited 246 consecutive adult ischemic stroke patients. Patients underwent cardiorespiratory sleep study with portable three-channel device during the first 48 h after the symptom onset of ischemic stroke. Results We enrolled 110 (65.5% male) stroke patients in the thrombolysis group and 94 (59.6% male) in the nonthrombolysis group. In the thrombolysis group, the median National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was higher (5.5) compared to the nonthrombolysis group (2.0) ( p p  = 0.002) and cerebellar (2.7% vs 16.0%, p p p  = 0.007). The mean baseline AHI was 33.7/h in the thrombolysis group compared to 26.8/h in the nonthrombolysis group ( p  = 0.017). Conclusion Sleep apnea was present in the vast majority of ischemic stroke patients. The stroke patients treated with thrombolysis were more likely to have sleep apnea, to have elevated NIHSS score at admission, and to be younger. Sleep apnea was more severe among those receiving thrombolysis as compared to those who were not. Clinical trial registration URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.cov . Unique identifier: NCT01861275 .
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