Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo

Reversed Robin Hood syndrome (RRHS) is described as the steal of arterial blood flow from ischemic to non-ischemic parts of the brain. It is one of the causes of early deterioration in patients with ischemic stroke. The case presented here led us to think about the relationship between RRHS and stro...

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Main Authors: Sadaf Sheikh, Umair Javed, Muhammad Akbar Baig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galenos Yayinevi 2020-12-01
Series:Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: http://akademikaciltip.com/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/thinking-reverse-robin-hood-syndrome-in-the-emerge/41700
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spelling doaj-f377133d10eb4117a0d2beec726240fe2020-12-02T18:18:03ZengGalenos YayineviEurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine2149-58072149-60482020-12-0119423623810.4274/eajem.galenos.2020.0225913049054Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with VertigoSadaf Sheikh0Umair Javed1Muhammad Akbar Baig2 Department of Emergency Medicine, Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, Muscat, Oman Department of Internal Medicine, Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan Department of Internal Medicine, Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan Reversed Robin Hood syndrome (RRHS) is described as the steal of arterial blood flow from ischemic to non-ischemic parts of the brain. It is one of the causes of early deterioration in patients with ischemic stroke. The case presented here led us to think about the relationship between RRHS and stroke risk. Flow steal with arterial occlusions is a well-known phenomenon. This phenomenon is named so due to its similarity with the phrase “rob the poor to feed the rich.” However, more studies are needed to evaluate the concept of blood flow steal in real-time. A possible mechanism is the vasodilation of non-ischemic areas that steal the blood flow from the ischemic areas. http://akademikaciltip.com/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/thinking-reverse-robin-hood-syndrome-in-the-emerge/41700 reversed robin hood syndromestrokevertigo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sadaf Sheikh
Umair Javed
Muhammad Akbar Baig
spellingShingle Sadaf Sheikh
Umair Javed
Muhammad Akbar Baig
Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo
Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine
reversed robin hood syndrome
stroke
vertigo
author_facet Sadaf Sheikh
Umair Javed
Muhammad Akbar Baig
author_sort Sadaf Sheikh
title Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo
title_short Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo
title_full Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo
title_fullStr Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo
title_full_unstemmed Thinking Reverse Robin Hood Syndrome in the Emergency Room: Case of a Male with Vertigo
title_sort thinking reverse robin hood syndrome in the emergency room: case of a male with vertigo
publisher Galenos Yayinevi
series Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine
issn 2149-5807
2149-6048
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Reversed Robin Hood syndrome (RRHS) is described as the steal of arterial blood flow from ischemic to non-ischemic parts of the brain. It is one of the causes of early deterioration in patients with ischemic stroke. The case presented here led us to think about the relationship between RRHS and stroke risk. Flow steal with arterial occlusions is a well-known phenomenon. This phenomenon is named so due to its similarity with the phrase “rob the poor to feed the rich.” However, more studies are needed to evaluate the concept of blood flow steal in real-time. A possible mechanism is the vasodilation of non-ischemic areas that steal the blood flow from the ischemic areas.
topic reversed robin hood syndrome
stroke
vertigo
url http://akademikaciltip.com/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/thinking-reverse-robin-hood-syndrome-in-the-emerge/41700
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