Heikinheimo T, Chimbayo D
Department of Neurology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland ; Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Malawi, Blantyre, Malawi.
Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Malawi, Blantyre, Malawi.
Malawi Med J. 2015 Jun;27(2):50-4. doi: 10.4314/mmj.v27i2.4.
In post-stroke patients, impairment of quality of life (QOL) has been associated with functional impairment, age, anxiety, depression, and fatigue. Good social support, higher education, and better socioeconomic status are associated with better QOL among stroke survivors. In Africa, studies from Nigeria and Tanzania have reported on post-stroke QOL.
The aim of this study was to describe QOL more than six months after first-ever stroke in Malawi.
This was an interview-based study about a stroke-surviving cohort. Adult patients were interviewed six or twelve months after their first ever stroke. HIV status, modified stroke severity scale (mNIHSS) score, and brain scan results were recorded during the acute phase of stroke. At the time of the interviews, the modified Rankin scale (mRS) was used to assess functional outcome. The interviews applied the Newcastle Stroke-specific Quality of Life Measure (NEWSQOL). All the data were analysed using Statview™: the X(2) test compared proportions, Student's t-test compared means for normally distributed data, and the Kruskal-Wallis test was used for nonparametric data.
Eighty-one patients were followed up at least six months after the acute stroke. Twenty-five stroke patients (ten women) were interviewed with the NEWSQOL questionnaire. Good functional outcome (lower mRS score) was positively associated with better QOL in the domains of activities of daily living (ADL)/self-care (p = 0.0024) and communication (p = 0.031). Women scored worse in the fatigue (p = 0.0081) and cognition (p = 0.048) domains. Older age was associated with worse QOL in the ADL (p = 0.0122) domain. Seven patients were HIV-seroreactive. HIV infection did not affect post-stroke QOL.
In Malawi, within specific domains, QOL after stroke appeared to be related to patients' age, sex, and functional recovery in this small sample of patients.
在中风后患者中,生活质量(QOL)受损与功能障碍、年龄、焦虑、抑郁和疲劳有关。良好的社会支持、高等教育以及更好的社会经济地位与中风幸存者更好的生活质量相关。在非洲,尼日利亚和坦桑尼亚的研究报告了中风后的生活质量情况。
本研究的目的是描述马拉维首次中风超过六个月后的生活质量。
这是一项基于访谈的中风幸存者队列研究。成年患者在首次中风后六个月或十二个月接受访谈。在中风急性期记录HIV状态、改良中风严重程度量表(mNIHSS)评分和脑部扫描结果。在访谈时,使用改良Rankin量表(mRS)评估功能结局。访谈采用纽卡斯尔中风特异性生活质量量表(NEWSQOL)。所有数据均使用Statview™进行分析:X(2)检验比较比例,学生t检验比较正态分布数据的均值,Kruskal-Wallis检验用于非参数数据。
81例患者在急性中风后至少随访了六个月。25例中风患者(10名女性)接受了NEWSQOL问卷访谈。良好的功能结局(较低的mRS评分)与日常生活活动(ADL)/自我护理(p = 0.0024)和沟通(p = 0.031)领域更好的生活质量呈正相关。女性在疲劳(p = 0.0081)和认知(p = 0.048)领域得分更差。年龄较大与ADL(p = 0.0122)领域较差的生活质量相关。7例患者HIV血清反应呈阳性。HIV感染不影响中风后的生活质量。
在马拉维,在这一小部分患者样本中,中风后的生活质量在特定领域似乎与患者的年龄、性别和功能恢复有关。