Article Text
Abstract
Neurologists are generally stepped in the time-honoured tradition of making meticulous observations about individual patients. Our occasionally obsessive tendencies allow us to fixate on the details of a patient’s history before performing a sophisticated physical examination, and (hopefully) arriving at a correct anatomical and pathological diagnosis for the particular problem. Recent technological advances have honed these diagnostic tools to an even finer edge. However, until fairly recently, the intellectual thrill of the neuro-diagnostic ‘chase’ went unmatched by the satisfaction of delivering effective treatment, leading to the ‘nice job but so what’ criticism often levelled at our speciality. To add a note of personal misgiving, the area within neurology that interests me most is stroke. I have lost track of the number of times that I have been told by other smug specialists, with a note of pity in their voices, that, ‘It’s all over as soon as the stroke has
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- SOCRATES 1 (synopsis of Cochrane reviews applicable to emergency services)
- Management of acute ischemic stroke
- Successful thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke after reversal of dabigatran etexilate with idarucizumab
- Republished: Successful thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke after reversal of dabigatran etexilate with idarucizumab
- Thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke: a new challenge for emergency medicine
- The Chinese Stroke Association scientific statement: intravenous thrombolysis in acute ischaemic stroke
- Thrombolysis in very elderly people: controlled comparison of SITS International Stroke Thrombolysis Registry and Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive
- What causes intracerebral bleeding after thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke? Recent insights into mechanisms and potential biomarkers
- BET 3
- Potential for quality improvement of acute stroke management in a district general hospital