Witt Brandi J, Ballman Karla V, Brown Robert D, Meverden Ryan A, Jacobsen Steven J, Roger Véronique L
Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn 55905, USA.
Am J Med. 2006 Apr;119(4):354.e1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2005.10.058.
While the risk of stroke after myocardial infarction (MI) is increased compared with the risk among those without MI, the magnitude of this risk remains unclear. Although numerous clinical trials have reported the incidence of stroke following MI, these are among selected populations. We reviewed cohort studies reporting the incidence of stroke after MI to better define the risk of ischemic stroke in an unselected population.
A computerized literature search (MEDLINE and PubMed) and manual review of reference lists of identified articles were conducted. Population-based studies published from 1978-2004 with at least 100 subjects that reported number or percent of ischemic strokes experienced by MI survivors were identified. Data were extracted using standardized forms, and study quality was assessed by 2 independent reviewers. Ischemic stroke rates were reported as number of events per 1000 MI with 95% confidence intervals (CI) calculated by Poisson distribution. A combined stroke rate was calculated for in-hospital, 30 days, and 1-year post-MI using weights of 1/variance. A random-effects model also was created to estimate in-hospital stroke rate. Variability in study designs and outcome definitions limit synthesis of available data.
During hospitalization for the index MI, 11.1 ischemic strokes occurred per 1000 MI compared with 12.2 at 30 days and 21.4 at 1 year. Using a random-effects model, 14.5 strokes occurred per 1000 MI. Positive predictors of stroke after MI included: advanced age, diabetes, hypertension, history of prior stroke, anterior location of index MI, prior MI, atrial fibrillation, heart failure, and nonwhite race.
The public health implications of stroke among MI survivors, as well as the large number of MI survivors, underscore the need to be aware of this devastating complication. Further research is needed to determine the optimal stroke prevention strategies for MI survivors.
与无心肌梗死(MI)者相比,心肌梗死后发生卒中的风险增加,但其风险程度尚不清楚。尽管众多临床试验报告了心肌梗死后卒中的发生率,但这些研究针对的是特定人群。我们回顾了队列研究,这些研究报告了心肌梗死后卒中的发生率,以便更好地界定未选择人群中缺血性卒中的风险。
进行了计算机文献检索(MEDLINE和PubMed),并人工查阅了已识别文章的参考文献列表。确定了1978年至2004年发表的基于人群的研究,这些研究纳入至少100名受试者,并报告了心肌梗死幸存者发生缺血性卒中的数量或百分比。使用标准化表格提取数据,由2名独立评审员评估研究质量。缺血性卒中发生率报告为每1000例心肌梗死的事件数,并通过泊松分布计算95%置信区间(CI)。使用1/方差权重计算心肌梗死后住院期间、30天和1年的综合卒中发生率。还创建了随机效应模型来估计住院期间的卒中发生率。研究设计和结局定义的差异限制了可用数据的综合分析。
在首次心肌梗死住院期间,每1000例心肌梗死发生11.1例缺血性卒中,30天时为12.2例,1年时为21.4例。使用随机效应模型,每1000例心肌梗死发生14.5例卒中。心肌梗死后卒中的阳性预测因素包括:高龄、糖尿病、高血压、既往卒中史、首次心肌梗死的前壁部位、既往心肌梗死、心房颤动、心力衰竭和非白人种族。
心肌梗死幸存者中卒中的公共卫生影响以及大量的心肌梗死幸存者,凸显了认识这一毁灭性并发症的必要性。需要进一步研究以确定心肌梗死幸存者的最佳卒中预防策略。