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Abstract Details

Can We Improve Clinical Detection of Right Hemisphere Large Vessel Occlusion?
Cerebrovascular Disease and Interventional Neurology
S26 - Cerebrovascular Disease: Systems of Stroke Care (2:00 PM-2:12 PM)
006
We hypothesized that the EMSA would detect left hemispheric LVO with a higher sensitivity than right hemispheric LVO.
The Emergency Medical Stroke Assessment (EMSA) is a 6-point stroke severity scale with one point each for gaze preference, facial droop, arm drift, leg drift, abnormal naming, and abnormal repetition that was developed to help EMS providers identify AIS patients with LVO. 

We trained 24 trauma system-based emergency communication center (ECC) paramedics in the EMSA and compared the sensitivity, specificity, AUC, and 95% CI of ECC-guided prehospital EMSA for right versus left hemispheric ICA or M1 occlusions.

We enrolled 569 patients from September 2016 through February 2018 - 236 had a discharge diagnosis of stroke and 173 had a diagnosis of AIS. We excluded patients with bilateral (n=21) and brainstem (n=21) AIS. There were 64 patients with left hemispheric AIS including 19 with LVO. There were 67 patients with right hemispheric AIS including 22 with LVO. A score of ≥ 4 points yielded a sensitivity of 84.2 (95% CI = 60.4-96.6) and specificity of 66.7 (51.1-80.0) for left hemispheric LVO compared to a sensitivity of 68.2 (45.1-86.1) and specificity of 73.9 (58.9-85.7) for right hemispheric LVO. For predicting a left hemispheric LVO, the AUC was 0.77 (0.65-0.90) compared to 0.66 (0.50-0.82) for the right-sided LVO. Assigning 2 points for abnormal gaze yielded an AUC of 0.78 (0.66-0.91) versus 0.67 (0.52-0.83) for left and right hemispheric LVO, respectively.

The EMSA, like the NIHSS upon which it is based, is more sensitive to left compared to right hemispheric LVO. There is no comparable data on the right versus left hemisphere performance of other prehospital scales. There is a need to develop sensitive tests of right hemisphere dysfunction that are suitable for use in the field.

Authors/Disclosures
Sana Somani, MD, MBBS (Medstar Washington Hospital Center)
PRESENTER
Dr. Somani has nothing to disclose.
Toby I. Gropen, MD (University of Alabama At Birmingham) Dr. Gropen has nothing to disclose.
No disclosure on file