Patel Mehool, Coshall Catherine, Rudd Anthony G, Wolfe Charles D A
Department of Public Health Sciences, Guy's, King's & St Thomas' School of Medicine, King's College, London, UK.
Clin Rehabil. 2003 Mar;17(2):158-66. doi: 10.1191/0269215503cr596oa.
To describe the natural history of cognitive impairment following stroke over three years; determine factors associated with recovery of post-stroke cognitive impairment and examine the effect of this recovery on stroke outcomes.
Observational study.
Population-based register of first-ever strokes.
Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) for cognition (cognitive impairment: MMSE<24), Barthel and Frenchay activity indices for disability.
To describe its natural history, cognition was assessed at three months, 1, 2 and 3 years after stroke in 163 subjects registered in 1995. Recovery of cognitive impairment was examined using a larger cohort registered between 1995 and 1998 (n = 476) and 193 subjects cognitively impaired at three months were reassessed a year post stroke; 34 who had recovered cognitively (MMSE 24-30) were compared with 102 with persistent cognitive impairment in terms of demography, risk factors, initial impairments and stroke subtype.
At three months, 1, 2 and 3 years post stroke, the prevalence rates of cognitive impairment were 39%, 35%, 30% and 32% respectively. Multivariable analyses showed that recovery was associated with smoking (OR 3.7; 95% CI 1.2-11.8), compromised by visuospatial neglect (OR 0.27; 95% CI 0.08-0.89), and had a near-significant association with right hemispheric lesion (OR 2.87; 95% CI 0.94-8.78). Cognitive recovery was associated with less institutionalization (p = 0.032) and being less disabled, on Barthel (p = 0.001) and Frenchay Activity Indices (p = 0.028).
Cognitive impairment remains highly prevalent up to three years after first stroke. Recovery from cognitive impairment is associated with smoking and possibly right hemisphere strokes, but compromised by visuospatial neglect. These associations require further clarification.
描述卒中后三年认知障碍的自然史;确定与卒中后认知障碍恢复相关的因素,并研究这种恢复对卒中结局的影响。
观察性研究。
基于人群的首次卒中登记。
使用简易精神状态检查表(MMSE)评估认知(认知障碍:MMSE<24),使用巴氏指数和法国ay活动指数评估残疾情况。
为描述其自然史,对1995年登记的163名受试者在卒中后3个月、1年、2年和3年进行认知评估。使用1995年至1998年登记的更大队列(n = 476)研究认知障碍的恢复情况,对3个月时存在认知障碍的193名受试者在卒中后一年进行重新评估;将34名认知恢复(MMSE 24 - 30)的受试者与102名持续存在认知障碍的受试者在人口统计学、危险因素、初始损伤和卒中亚型方面进行比较。
卒中后3个月、1年、2年和3年时,认知障碍的患病率分别为39%、35%、30%和32%。多变量分析显示,恢复与吸烟有关(比值比3.7;95%可信区间1.2 - 11.8),受视觉空间忽视影响(比值比0.27;95%可信区间0.08 - 0.89),与右半球病变有接近显著的关联(比值比2.87;95%可信区间0.94 - 8.78)。认知恢复与较少入住机构(p = 0.032)以及在巴氏指数(p = 0.001)和法国ay活动指数(p = 0.028)上残疾程度较轻有关。
首次卒中后长达三年,认知障碍仍然非常普遍。认知障碍的恢复与吸烟以及可能的右半球卒中有关,但受视觉空间忽视影响。这些关联需要进一步阐明。