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Background And Purpose: This randomized study aimed to evaluate whether the use of a stroke clock demanding active feedback from the stroke physician accelerates acute stroke management.
Methods: For this randomized controlled study, a large-display alarm clock was installed in the computed tomography room, where admission, diagnostic work-up, and intravenous thrombolysis occurred. Alarms were set at the following target times after admission: (1) 15 minutes (neurological examination completed); (2) 25 minutes (computed tomography scanning and international normalized ratio determination by point-of-care laboratory completed); and (3) 30 minutes (intravenous thrombolysis started). The responsible stroke physician had to actively provide feedback by pressing a buzzer button. The alarm could be avoided by pressing the button before time out. Times to therapy decision (primary end point, defined as the end of all diagnostic work-up required for decision for or against recanalizing treatment), neurological examination, imaging, point-of-care laboratory, needle, and groin puncture were assessed by a neutral observer. Functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale) was assessed at day 90.
Results: Of 107 participants, 51 stroke clock patients exhibited better stroke-management metrics than 56 control patients. Times from door to (1) end of all indicated diagnostic work-up (treatment decision time; 16.73 versus 26.00 minutes, <0.001), (2) end of neurological examination (7.28 versus 10.00 minutes, <0.001), (3) end of computed tomography (11.17 versus 14.00 minutes, =0.002), (4) end of computed tomography angiography (14.00 versus 17.17 minutes, =0.001), (5) end of point-of-care laboratory testing (12.14 versus 20.00 minutes, <0.001), and (6) needle times (18.83 versus 47.00 minutes, =0.016) were improved. In contrast, door-to-groin puncture times and functional outcomes at day 90 were not significantly different.
Conclusions: This study showed that the use of a stroke clock demanding active feedback significantly improves acute stroke-management metrics and, thus, represents a potential low-cost strategy for streamlining time-sensitive stroke treatment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.029222 | DOI Listing |
Front Aging Neurosci
August 2025
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Jiaxing University, The Second Hospital of Jiaxing, Jiaxing, China.
Objective: This study aimed to investigate the effects of computer-assisted cognitive training (CACT) on cognitive function and activities of daily living in patients with post-stroke cognitive impairment. Additionally, it aimed to explore the changes in specific cognitive domains before and after treatment.
Design: The study was a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial.
Embryonic development follows a conserved sequence of events across species, yet the pace of development is highly variable and particularly slow in humans. Species-specific developmental timing is largely recapitulated in stem cell models, suggesting a cell-intrinsic clock. Here we use directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into neuroectoderm to perform a whole-genome CRISPR-Cas9 knockout screen and show that the epigenetic factors Menin and SUZ12 modulate the speed of PAX6 expression during neural differentiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke
August 2025
Department of Neurology (F.L., Chen Chen, G.L., L.L.), Shanghai East Hospital, School of Medicine, Tongji University, China.
Background: Salvageable ischemic tissue has become the treatment target of endovascular therapy (EVT). This study proposed a new concept of salvageable time window that measures the dynamic process of salvageable tissue. We hypothesized that patients who received EVT beyond the salvageable time window would have limited benefits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAging Dis
July 2025
Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Biological aging is closely associated with heightened disease risk, frailty, and mortality. Interestingly, physical traumas, such as burn injuries, exhibit physiological effects that resemble those of aging. However, the impact of burn injuries on biological aging remains underexplored, creating a gap in the literature that could inform better prognosis and outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell
August 2025
Institute for Diabetes and Cancer (IDC), Helmholtz Munich, German Research Center for Environmental Health, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany; Joint Heidelberg-IDC Translational Diabetes Program, Heidelberg University Hospital, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany; German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), 85764 Neuh
In cancer cachexia, the presence of a tumor triggers systemic metabolic disruption that leads to involuntary body weight loss and accelerated mortality in affected patients. Here, we conducted transcriptomic and epigenomic profiling of the liver in various weight-stable cancer and cancer cachexia models. An integrative multilevel analysis approach identified a distinct gene expression signature that included hepatocyte-secreted factors and the circadian clock component REV-ERBα as key modulator of hepatic transcriptional reprogramming in cancer cachexia.
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