Stroke: A Case Study

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Stroke is the second-leading cause of death globally (Johnson, Onuma, Owolabi, & Sachdev, 2016). There were estimated 6.5 million stroke deaths each year and approximately 58% were females (Girijala, Sohrabji, & Bush, 2017; Writing Group et al., 2016). Many stroke survivor patients have disabilities that could affect emotional problems, family burdens, and high costs of treatment (Abubakar & Isezuo, 2012; Bottacchi et al., 2012; Norrving & Kissela, 2013; Robinson & Jorge, 2016; Writing Group et al., 2016). Several studies showed females experiencing acute stroke were negatively impacted(Dehlendorff, Andersen, & Olsen, 2015; Gall et al., 2010; Girijala et al., 2017). Females not only suffered more severity, but also poorer functional recovery, troubled with higher post-stroke depression and had worse quality of life than males (Girijala et al., 2017; Lisabeth et al., 2015). Interestingly, one important cause that may involve these negative outcomes among women was the lower rate of appropriated treatment accesses; the thrombolytic treatment, the endovascular procedure, or the surgery(Boehme et al., 2014; Girijala et al., 2017; Jauch et al., 2013; Nagaraja et al., 2012). …show more content…

According to the narrow therapeutic time window, only 4.5 hours after onset, approximately 70 percent of ischemic stroke patients did not receive the reperfusion therapy due to delay in hospitalization (Eissa et al., 2013; Jauch et al.,

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