From the Research Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (W.L., M.B.), MRC Unit for Lifelong Health & Ageing (M.R.), and Stroke Research Centre, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology (D.W.), University College London, UK.
Neurology. 2022 Feb 8;98(6):e589-e600. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000013171. Epub 2021 Dec 10.
Evidence on timing of memory change after first and recurrent strokes is limited and inconsistent. We investigated memory trajectories before and after first and recurrent strokes in 18 European countries and tested whether the country-level acute stroke care was associated with memory change after stroke.
Data were from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (2004-2019). Incident first and recurrent strokes were identified among baseline stroke-free individuals. Within each country, each participant with incident stroke (case group) was matched with a stroke-free individual (control group) using propensity score matching. We applied multilevel segmented linear regression to quantify acute and accelerated memory changes (measured by the sum score of immediate and delayed word recall tests; 0-20 words) before and after first and recurrent strokes in both groups. Associations between stroke and memory were compared between countries with different levels of acute stroke care indicators.
The final analytical sample included 35,164 participants who were stroke-free at baseline (≥50 years). A total of 2,362 incident first and 341 recurrent strokes between 2004 and 2019 were identified. In case groups, mean acute decreases in memory scores were 0.48 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.31, 0.65) and 1.14 (95% CI 0.80, 1.48) words after first and recurrent stroke, respectively, independent of a range of confounders. No such acute decreases were observed in the control group after a hypothetical nonstroke onset date. In both groups, memory declined over time but decline rates were similar (-0.07 [95% CI -0.10, -0.05] vs -0.06 [95% CI -0.08, -0.05] words per year). The mean acute decreases in memory scores after first and recurrent strokes were smaller in countries with better access to endovascular treatment.
We found acute decreases but not accelerated declines in memory after first and recurrent strokes. Improved endovascular therapy might be associated with smaller memory loss after stroke but more evidence based on individual-level data is needed. More effort should be made in early assessment and intensive prevention of stroke among the ageing population and promoting access to and delivery of acute stroke care among patients with stroke.
首次和复发性卒中后记忆改变时间的证据有限且不一致。我们在 18 个欧洲国家调查了首次和复发性卒中前后的记忆轨迹,并检验了国家层面的急性卒中护理是否与卒中后记忆改变相关。
数据来自欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查(2004-2019 年)。在无卒中的基线人群中确定首发和复发卒中。在每个国家,对每个首发卒中的参与者(病例组),都与一个无卒中的个体(对照组)进行倾向评分匹配。我们应用多水平分段线性回归,量化两组病例组和对照组首次和复发性卒中前后的急性和加速记忆改变(用即时和延迟单词回忆测试的总和评分衡量;0-20 个单词)。在不同急性卒中护理指标水平的国家之间比较卒中与记忆之间的关联。
最终分析样本包括 35164 名基线时无卒中(≥50 岁)的参与者。在 2004 年至 2019 年期间共发现 2362 例首发和 341 例复发卒中。在病例组中,记忆评分的平均急性下降分别为首次和复发性卒中后 0.48(95%置信区间[CI] 0.31,0.65)和 1.14(95% CI 0.80,1.48)个单词,这独立于一系列混杂因素。在对照组中,在假设的非卒中发病日期后,未观察到这种急性下降。在两组中,记忆随时间推移而下降,但下降速度相似(每年下降-0.07[95% CI -0.10,-0.05] vs -0.06[95% CI -0.08,-0.05]个单词)。首次和复发性卒中后记忆评分的平均急性下降在血管内治疗更容易获得的国家较小。
我们发现首次和复发性卒中后存在急性下降,但不存在加速下降的记忆。改善血管内治疗可能与卒中后记忆丧失较小有关,但需要更多基于个体水平数据的证据。应在老龄化人群中加强对卒中的早期评估和强化预防,并促进卒中患者获得和接受急性卒中护理。