TY - JOUR
T1 - 12 versus 24 h bed rest after acute ischemic stroke thrombolysis
T2 - a preliminary experience
AU - Silver, Brian
AU - Hamid, Tariq
AU - Khan, Muhib
AU - DiNapoli, Mario
AU - Behrouz, Reza
AU - Saposnik, Gustavo
AU - Sarafin, Jo Ann
AU - Martin, Susan
AU - Moonis, Majaz
AU - Henninger, Nils
AU - Goddeau, Richard
AU - Jun-O'Connell, Adalia
AU - Cutting, Shawna M.
AU - Saad, Ali
AU - Yaghi, Shadi
AU - Hall, Wiley
AU - Muehlschlegel, Susanne
AU - Carandang, Raphael
AU - Osgood, Marcey
AU - Thompson, Bradford B.
AU - Fehnel, Corey R.
AU - Wendell, Linda C.
AU - Potter, N. Stevenson
AU - Gilchrist, James M.
AU - Barton, Bruce
N1 - Funding Information:
Brian Silver: Salary from Joint Commission for serving as a surveyor, expert fees for medicolegal malpractice review, case reviews for Best Doctors, compensation for adjudication of stroke outcomes for Women's Health Initiative, honoraria for authorship in Ebix, Medlink, Medscape. Gustavo Saposnik: Grant support from Heart and Stroke Foundation (Mid-Career Scientist Award), salary as Section Editor of Emerging Therapies for the journal Stroke. Nils Henninger: Grant support by K08NS091499 from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health and R44NS076272 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health. James M Gilchrist: Honorarium for serving on External Advisory Board for Alexion Pharmaceuticals, honorarium for serving as workshop faculty for American Association of Neuromuscular and Electrodiagnostic Medicine, royalties from UpToDate authorship. Tariq Hamid, Muhib Khan, Mario DiNapoli, Reza Behrouz, Jo-Ann Sarafin, Susan Martin, Majaz Moonis, Richard Goddeau, Adalia Jun-O'Connell, Shawna M Cutting, Ali Saad, Shadi Yaghi, Wiley Hall, Susanne Muehlschlegel, Raphael Carandang, Marcey Osgood, Bradford B. Thompson, Corey R Fehnel, Linda C. Wendell, Stevenson Potter, and Bruce Barton have nothing to disclose.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2020/2/15
Y1 - 2020/2/15
N2 - Background: The practice of ≥24 h of bed rest after acute ischemic stroke thrombolysis is common among hospitals, but its value compared to shorter periods of bed rest is unknown. Methods: Consecutive adult patients with a diagnosis of ischemic stroke who had received intravenous thrombolysis treatment from 1/1/2010 until 4/13/2016, identified from the local ischemic stroke registry, were included. Standard practice bed rest for ≥24 h, the protocol prior to 1/27/2014, was retrospectively compared with standard practice bed rest for ≥12 h, the protocol after that date. The primary outcome was favorable discharge location (defined as home, home with services, or acute rehabilitation). Secondary outcome measures included incidence of pneumonia, NIHSS at discharge, and length of stay. Results: 392 patients were identified (203 in the ≥24 h group, 189 in the ≥12 h group). There was no significant difference in favorable discharge outcome in the ≥24 h bed rest protocol compared with the ≥12 h bed rest protocol in multivariable logistic regression analysis (76.2% vs. 70.9%, adjusted OR 1.20 CI 0.71–2.03). Compared with the ≥24 h bed rest group, pneumonia rates (8.3% versus 1.6%, adjusted OR 0.12 CI 0.03–0.55), median discharge NIHSS (3 versus 2, adjusted p = .034), and mean length of stay (5.4 versus 3.5 days, adjusted p = .006) were lower in the ≥12 h bed rest group. Conclusion: Compared with ≥24 h bed rest, ≥12 h bed rest after acute ischemic stroke reperfusion therapy appeared to be similar. A non-inferiority randomized trial is needed to verify these findings.
AB - Background: The practice of ≥24 h of bed rest after acute ischemic stroke thrombolysis is common among hospitals, but its value compared to shorter periods of bed rest is unknown. Methods: Consecutive adult patients with a diagnosis of ischemic stroke who had received intravenous thrombolysis treatment from 1/1/2010 until 4/13/2016, identified from the local ischemic stroke registry, were included. Standard practice bed rest for ≥24 h, the protocol prior to 1/27/2014, was retrospectively compared with standard practice bed rest for ≥12 h, the protocol after that date. The primary outcome was favorable discharge location (defined as home, home with services, or acute rehabilitation). Secondary outcome measures included incidence of pneumonia, NIHSS at discharge, and length of stay. Results: 392 patients were identified (203 in the ≥24 h group, 189 in the ≥12 h group). There was no significant difference in favorable discharge outcome in the ≥24 h bed rest protocol compared with the ≥12 h bed rest protocol in multivariable logistic regression analysis (76.2% vs. 70.9%, adjusted OR 1.20 CI 0.71–2.03). Compared with the ≥24 h bed rest group, pneumonia rates (8.3% versus 1.6%, adjusted OR 0.12 CI 0.03–0.55), median discharge NIHSS (3 versus 2, adjusted p = .034), and mean length of stay (5.4 versus 3.5 days, adjusted p = .006) were lower in the ≥12 h bed rest group. Conclusion: Compared with ≥24 h bed rest, ≥12 h bed rest after acute ischemic stroke reperfusion therapy appeared to be similar. A non-inferiority randomized trial is needed to verify these findings.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jns.2019.116618
DO - 10.1016/j.jns.2019.116618
M3 - Article
C2 - 31837536
AN - SCOPUS:85076174033
SN - 0022-510X
VL - 409
JO - Journal of the Neurological Sciences
JF - Journal of the Neurological Sciences
M1 - 116618
ER -