Hoyer Carolin, Schmidt Hanna Luise, Kranaster Laura, Alonso Angelika
Department of Neurology, Universitätsmedizin Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2019 Jul 4;15:1823-1831. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S206771. eCollection 2019.
The comorbidity of psychiatric disorders and cerebrovascular disease appears to be complex with underlying bidirectional influences. Hitherto, research has focused mainly on the evaluation of stroke risk in particular psychiatric disorders; only a few studies have assessed their role in the acute natural history of stroke. The aim of this study was to provide a perspective on psychiatric premorbidity and its impact on stroke severity, psychiatric complications during the initial treatment phase, and the short-term functional outcome of stroke.
We retrospectively studied the impact of a predocumented psychiatric diagnosis (PDPD) on stroke severity, short-term functional outcome, and psychiatric complications in a sample of 798 patients consecutively admitted for acute ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke by performing a chart review. Group comparisons (PDPD vs non-PDPD) with adjustment for covariates were carried out either using multivariate analysis of variance or logistic regression analysis.
More severe strokes (ie, mean National Institute of Health Stroke Scale score on admission 10.1±7.9 vs 7.5±7.4; F(10,796)=18.5, <0.0001) and higher prevalence of poor outcome (73.7 vs 54.9%; OR: 2.6, standard error: 0.5, z=4.82, <0.0001) was found in patients with a documented psychiatric diagnosis at the time of stroke, as well as a higher rate of psychiatric complications during the initial treatment phase (46.7 vs 28.9%; OR: -0.78, z=4.59, <0.0001).
Our data have clinical implications in that they call for identification of psychiatric premorbidity or comorbidity through careful history-taking and particularly close monitoring for psychiatric complications with respect to their potentially negative impact on outcome after stroke.
精神疾病与脑血管疾病的合并症似乎很复杂,存在潜在的双向影响。迄今为止,研究主要集中在特定精神疾病中中风风险的评估;只有少数研究评估了它们在中风急性自然病程中的作用。本研究的目的是探讨精神疾病前驱状态及其对中风严重程度、初始治疗阶段精神并发症以及中风短期功能结局的影响。
我们通过病历回顾,对798例因急性缺血性或出血性中风连续入院的患者样本进行了回顾性研究,以探讨预先记录的精神疾病诊断(PDPD)对中风严重程度、短期功能结局和精神并发症的影响。使用多变量方差分析或逻辑回归分析对协变量进行调整后进行组间比较(PDPD组与非PDPD组)。
中风时记录有精神疾病诊断的患者中,中风更严重(即入院时美国国立卫生研究院卒中量表平均得分10.1±7.9 vs 7.5±7.4;F(10,796)=18.5,P<0.0001),不良结局的患病率更高(73.7% vs 54.9%;OR:2.6,标准误:0.5,z=4.82,P<0.0001),并且初始治疗阶段精神并发症的发生率更高(46.7% vs 28.9%;OR:-0.78,z=4.59,P<0.0001)。
我们的数据具有临床意义,即通过仔细询问病史来识别精神疾病前驱状态或合并症,特别是密切监测精神并发症,因为它们可能对中风后的结局产生负面影响。