Surgical Masks May Hide Neurological Diagnoses.

IF 0.6 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Case Reports in Neurology Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1159/000526716
Martin S Gizzi, Ryan J Mason, Andrew Amaranto
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

COVID-19 has disrupted the routine flow of patients through emergency departments (EDs) across the globe, including the need to consider COVID-19 for nearly all presenting complaints. The constraints of mask wearing and isolation have created inherent barriers to timely stroke care. We present a case that highlights one of the many ways in which the pandemic has negatively impacted the care of the non-COVID patient. A patient presented to the ED with a chief complaint of diffuse weakness and a new-onset cough on awakening. His daughter noted that he was slurring his words. An emergency medicine resident evaluated him, ordered laboratory studies, and decided to monitor the patient. The same resident later noted the patient veering to the left when walking, prompting a more detailed neurological examination. On removing the patient's facemask, a left lower facial weakness was evident. The resident called a Code Stroke roughly 50 min after the patient initially presented to the ED. The patient proved to have an acute infarct at the right thalamocapsular junction. Universal masking policies during the COVID-19 pandemic should not prevent the routine assessment of cranial nerve function for all patients presenting to an ED.

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外科口罩可能隐藏神经学诊断。
COVID-19扰乱了全球急诊科(ed)患者的常规流量,包括几乎所有提出投诉的患者都需要考虑COVID-19。戴口罩和隔离的限制对及时的中风护理造成了固有的障碍。我们提出的这个案例突出了大流行对非covid患者的护理产生负面影响的众多方式之一。病人以弥漫性虚弱和新发咳嗽为主诉来到急诊室。他女儿注意到他说话含糊不清。一位急诊住院医师对他进行了评估,下令进行实验室检查,并决定对患者进行监测。这位住院医生后来注意到病人走路时偏左,于是进行了更详细的神经学检查。取下患者口罩后,左侧下面部明显无力。住院医生在病人最初到急诊科后约50分钟称其为脑卒中。病人被证实在右侧丘脑囊交界处有急性梗死。COVID-19大流行期间的通用掩盖政策不应阻止对所有急诊科患者进行脑神经功能常规评估。
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来源期刊
Case Reports in Neurology
Case Reports in Neurology Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
67
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: This new peer-reviewed online-only journal publishes original case reports covering the entire spectrum of neurology. Clinicians and researchers are given a tool to disseminate their personal experience to a wider public as well as to review interesting cases encountered by colleagues all over the world. To complement the contributions supplementary material is welcomed. The reports are searchable according to the key words supplied by the authors; it will thus be possible to search across the entire growing collection of case reports with universally used terms, further facilitating the retrieval of specific information. Following the open access principle, the entire contents can be retrieved at no charge, guaranteeing easy access to this valuable source of anecdotal information at all times.
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