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Mobile Interventional Stroke Team Model Improves Early Outcomes in Large Vessel Occlusion Stroke
Author(s) -
Jacob Morey,
Thomas J. Oxley,
Daniel Wei,
Christopher P. Kellner,
Neha Dangayach,
Laura Stein,
Danny Hom,
Danielle Wheelwright,
Liorah Rubenstein,
Maryna Skliut,
Hazem Shoirah,
Reade De Leacy,
Inder Paul Singh,
Xiangnan Zhang,
Steven Persaud,
Stanley Tuhrim,
Mandip S. Dhamoon,
Joshua B. Bederson,
J Mocco,
Johanna T Fifi,
Irene Boniece,
Carolyn D. Brockington,
Michael Fara,
Qing Hao,
Deborah Horowitz,
Cappi Lay,
John Liang,
E. John Nasrallah,
Tara Roche,
Kara Sheinart,
Christopher Tegtmeyer,
Jesse Weinberger
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
stroke
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.397
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1524-4628
pISSN - 0039-2499
DOI - 10.1161/strokeaha.120.030248
Subject(s) - medicine , stroke (engine) , triage , clinical endpoint , single center , surgery , emergency medicine , randomized controlled trial , mechanical engineering , engineering
Triage of patients with emergent large vessel occlusion stroke to primary stroke centers followed by transfer to comprehensive stroke centers leads to increased time to endovascular therapy. A Mobile Interventional Stroke Team (MIST) provides an alternative model by transferring a MIST to a Thrombectomy Capable Stroke Center (TSC) to perform endovascular therapy. Our aim is to determine whether the MIST model is more time-efficient and leads to improved clinical outcomes compared with standard drip-and-ship (DS) and mothership models.

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