Chen Karen, Marsh Elisabeth B
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2018 Nov;174:192-197. doi: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2018.09.027. Epub 2018 Sep 17.
Post-stroke fatigue (PSF) is a debilitating complication of stroke recovery. Contributing risk factors, whether they are modifiable, and if they change over time remain understudied. We determine factors associated with PSF and how they evolve from the subacute through chronic phases of recovery.
A consecutive series of patients presenting to our comprehensive stroke center with acute stroke were seen in follow-up within 6 months of infarct and administered the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT) fatigue scale to evaluate for PSF. It was re-administered >6 months post-infarct. Demographics, stroke characteristics (NIH Stroke Scale [NIHSS], infarct size and location), medical comorbidities, and outcomes (modified Rankin Scale [mRS]) were also recorded. Regression analyses were used to determine factors associated with FACIT scores and PSF at each time point.
203 patients were administered the FACIT a mean 1.6 months post-stroke; 128 underwent re-administration (mean 13.9 months post-event). In adjusted models, stroke severity (follow-up NIHSS [p < 0.001], mRS [p = 0.005]) and posterior circulation localization (p = 0.012) were associated with lower FACIT scores (increased fatigue) in the subacute setting, while medical comorbidities (hypertension [p = 0.024], obstructive sleep apnea [p = 0.020]) and medication use (anticonvulsants [p = 0.021]) were associated with lower scores chronically. Baseline depression (p < 0.001, p = 0.029) was associated with lower scores at both time points.
Early PSF appears to be largely attributable to stroke severity, while chronic fatigue occurs in the setting of medical comorbidities and medication use. This has significant clinical implications when considering management strategies at different stages of recovery.
中风后疲劳(PSF)是中风恢复过程中一种使人衰弱的并发症。其相关危险因素、是否可改变以及随时间的变化情况仍未得到充分研究。我们确定与PSF相关的因素以及它们在从亚急性期到慢性恢复期的演变过程。
一系列连续的急性中风患者在我院综合中风中心就诊,在梗死6个月内进行随访,并使用慢性病治疗功能评估(FACIT)疲劳量表评估PSF。在梗死6个月后再次进行评估。记录人口统计学资料、中风特征(美国国立卫生研究院卒中量表[NIHSS]、梗死大小和位置)、合并症以及预后(改良Rankin量表[mRS])。采用回归分析确定每个时间点与FACIT评分和PSF相关的因素。
203例患者在中风后平均1.6个月接受了FACIT评估;128例患者接受了再次评估(事件发生后平均13.9个月)。在调整模型中,中风严重程度(随访NIHSS[p<0.001]、mRS[p = 0.005])和后循环定位(p = 0.012)与亚急性期较低的FACIT评分(疲劳增加)相关,而合并症(高血压[p = 0.024]、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停[p = 0.020])和药物使用(抗惊厥药[p = 0.021])与慢性期较低的评分相关。基线抑郁(p<0.001,p = 0.029)在两个时间点均与较低评分相关。
早期PSF似乎主要归因于中风严重程度,而慢性疲劳则发生在合并症和药物使用的情况下。这在考虑不同恢复阶段的管理策略时具有重要的临床意义。