Lai Sue-Min, Duncan Pamela W, Dew Paul, Keighley John
Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, The University of Kansas Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Blvd, Kansas City, KS 66160-7313, USA.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2005 Jul;2(3):A13. Epub 2005 Jun 15.
This study examined differences between men and women in the ability to perform basic activities of daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, and higher physical functioning after stroke. The objective of the study was to determine whether sex differences in stroke recovery can be explained by depressive status beyond older age, stroke severity, prestroke physical functioning, and other medical comorbidities.
A total of 459 stroke patients were recruited from acute and subacute facilities in an urban midwestern community. These patients were followed prospectively from stroke onset until 6 months poststroke. All study participants were assessed using standardized stroke outcome measures, including the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, the Barthel Activities of Daily Living Index, the Lawton Instrumental Activities of Daily Living scale, and the SF-36 Health Survey physical functioning scale. The Geriatric Depression Scale was used to assess depressive status. Each outcome was measured at baseline (within 2 weeks of stroke onset), as well as 1, 3, and 6 months poststroke. Prestroke physical functioning, stroke characteristics, and comorbidities were also assessed at baseline.
Female patients in the study were older than male patients, with a mean age of 71 years for women vs 69 years for men. Female patients reported lower prestroke physical functioning than their male counterparts. Six months after stroke, women in the study were less likely than the men to achieve a score of > or = 95 on the Barthel Activities of Daily Living Index (hazards ratio [HR] = 0.68; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.52-0.90), carry out eight of nine instrumental activities of daily living without assistance (HR = 0.46; 95% CI, 0.30-0.68), and score > or = 90 on the SF-36 Health Survey physical functioning scale (HR = 0.54; 95% CI, 0.28-1.01). When age, prestroke physical functioning, stroke severity, and depressive status at baseline were controlled in the analysis, women in the study continued to be less likely (HR = 0.51; 95% CI, 0.32-0.79) than men in the study to be able to carry out eight of nine instrumental activities of daily living completely without assistance, but there were no observed sex differences in achievement of independence in basic activities of daily living or higher physical functioning.
Prestroke physical functioning and depressive symptoms are important factors in the investigation of sex differences in stroke recovery. Lower recovery of activities of daily living and physical functioning in women after stroke may be due to multifactorial effects of older age, poor physical function prior to stroke onset, and depressive status after stroke.
本研究调查了男性和女性在中风后进行基本日常生活活动、工具性日常生活活动以及更高水平身体机能方面的能力差异。该研究的目的是确定中风恢复过程中的性别差异是否可以通过抑郁状态来解释,而不仅仅取决于年龄、中风严重程度、中风前身体机能以及其他合并症。
从美国中西部城市社区的急性和亚急性医疗机构招募了总共459名中风患者。这些患者从中风发作开始进行前瞻性随访,直至中风后6个月。所有研究参与者均使用标准化的中风结局测量方法进行评估,包括美国国立卫生研究院中风量表、巴氏日常生活活动指数、洛顿工具性日常生活活动量表以及SF-36健康调查身体机能量表。使用老年抑郁量表评估抑郁状态。每个结局指标在基线(中风发作后2周内)以及中风后1、3和6个月进行测量。中风前身体机能、中风特征和合并症也在基线时进行评估。
研究中的女性患者比男性患者年龄更大,女性的平均年龄为71岁,男性为69岁。女性患者报告的中风前身体机能低于男性患者。中风后6个月,研究中的女性在巴氏日常生活活动指数上得分≥95分的可能性低于男性(风险比[HR]=0.68;95%置信区间[CI],0.52 - 0.90),在无需协助的情况下完成九项工具性日常生活活动中的八项的可能性低于男性(HR = 0.46;95% CI,0.30 - 0.68),并且在SF-36健康调查身体机能量表上得分≥90分的可能性低于男性(HR = 0.54;95% CI,0.28 - 1.01)。在分析中控制了年龄、中风前身体机能、中风严重程度和基线时的抑郁状态后,研究中的女性能够完全独立完成九项工具性日常生活活动中的八项的可能性仍然低于男性(HR = 0.51;95% CI,0.32 - 0.79),但在基本日常生活活动或更高水平身体机能的独立性实现方面未观察到性别差异。
中风前身体机能和抑郁症状是研究中风恢复性别差异的重要因素。中风后女性日常生活活动和身体机能恢复较差可能是由于年龄较大、中风发作前身体功能不佳以及中风后抑郁状态等多因素影响。