Graduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Rehabilitation Research Program, Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute, Vancouver, Canada.
Phys Ther. 2022 Jan 1;102(1). doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzab246.
The purpose of this study was to provide contemporary estimates of the prevalence of lower extremity motor impairment and walking limitation after first-ever stroke and to characterize the predictive nature of early walking ability for being discharged home after acute hospitalization.
In this cohort study, data were collected from a metropolitan acute care hospital in Canada at admission for 487 adults with first-ever acute ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke. Lower extremity motor impairment and walking limitation were measured using the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and AlphaFIM, respectively. Parallel multivariable logistic regression models were built to predict discharge home after acute hospitalization compared with further hospitalization.
For patients surviving a first-ever stroke, 44.1% presented with some degree of lower extremity motor impairment and 46.0% were unable to walk. In a multivariable model built around a binary classification of walking (Nagelkerke R2 = 0.41), those with any ability to walk at admission (with or without therapist assistance) had 9.48 times greater odds of being discharged home (odds ratio = 9.48, 95% CI = 6.11-14.92) than those who were unable. In a parallel multivariable model built around an ordinal classification of walking (Nagelkerke R2 = 0.49), patients had 2.07 times greater odds (odds ratio = 2.07, 95% CI = 1.82-2.38) of being discharged home for each increment on a 6-point walking scale (total dependence to complete independence) assessed at acute admission.
Approximately one-half of patients with first-ever stroke present with lower extremity weakness and walking limitation. Early walking ability is a significant predictor of returning home after acute hospitalization, independent of stroke severity. Discharge planning may be facilitated early after stroke with the familiar assessment of walking ability.
An early assessment of walking function within days of stroke admission can help to streamline discharge planning.
Nearly one-half of all individuals who experience a first-time stroke have walking difficulty when they arrive at the hospital. The severity of the walking limitation can predict whether a patient will eventually be discharged home or go on to further hospitalization.
本研究旨在提供首次脑卒中后下肢运动障碍和行走受限的当代患病率数据,并描述早期行走能力对急性住院后出院回家的预测作用。
本队列研究收集了加拿大一家大都市急性护理医院首次急性缺血性或出血性脑卒中患者的入院数据,共 487 例。下肢运动障碍和行走受限分别使用国立卫生研究院卒中量表和 AlphaFIM 进行测量。建立平行多变量逻辑回归模型,预测急性住院后出院回家与进一步住院的情况。
对于存活的首次脑卒中患者,44.1%存在一定程度的下肢运动障碍,46.0%无法行走。在一个围绕行走的二分类(Nagelkerke R2=0.41)建立的多变量模型中,入院时具有行走能力(无论是否有治疗师协助)的患者出院回家的可能性是无法行走患者的 9.48 倍(比值比=9.48,95%CI=6.11-14.92)。在一个围绕行走的有序分类(Nagelkerke R2=0.49)建立的平行多变量模型中,患者在急性入院时评估的 6 分步行量表(从完全依赖到完全独立)每增加一分,出院回家的可能性增加 2.07 倍(比值比=2.07,95%CI=1.82-2.38)。
大约一半的首次脑卒中患者存在下肢无力和行走受限。早期行走能力是急性住院后出院回家的重要预测因素,独立于卒中严重程度。在卒中后早期,通过熟悉的行走能力评估可以促进出院计划的制定。
在卒中发病后几天内对行走功能进行早期评估有助于简化出院计划。