Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Nippon Medical School Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Nippon Medical School, Tokyo, Japan.
Top Stroke Rehabil. 2024 Jul;31(5):493-500. doi: 10.1080/10749357.2023.2291898. Epub 2023 Dec 18.
Frailty in older individuals is an underappreciated condition that affects the incidence and/or prognosis of stroke.
We evaluated the prevalence of pre-onset frailty in patients with acute first-onset and recurrent strokes and association between pre-onset frailty and functional disability at hospital discharge.
This prospective cohort study included 210 acute stroke patients admitted to the Stroke Unit of Nippon Medical School Hospital during November 2021-June 2022. The mean participant age was 79.2 ± 7.4 years. Age, sex, pre-onset frailty, body mass index (BMI), stroke type, medical history, and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score at admission were evaluated. Frailty was defined as a clinical frailty scale (CFS) score ≥ 5. Frailty prevalence was calculated for all patients, and scores of functional disabilities at discharge were evaluated using modified Rankin scale.
Overall frailty prevalence was 31% in all stroke patients, with 24% and 47% of first-onset and recurrent strokes, respectively. Pre-onset frailty, NIHSS score at admission, age, stroke type, previous stroke, sex, BMI, dyslipidemia, and atrial fibrillation were significantly associated with functional disability at discharge. Logistic regression analysis revealed that CFS score, NIHSS score at admission, and previous stroke were independent predictors of functional disability at discharge.
Approximately one-fourth of patients with first-onset stroke had pre-onset frailty; the rate doubled in recurrent stroke; these rates appear to be much larger than rate in healthy individuals. Pre-onset frailty, a negative independent factor affecting functional disability at discharge, is important for pre-onset frailty evaluation and rehabilitation intervention in acute stroke patients.
老年人衰弱是一种被低估的状况,会影响中风的发病率和/或预后。
我们评估了首发和复发性急性中风患者发病前衰弱的患病率,以及发病前衰弱与出院时功能残疾之间的关系。
这项前瞻性队列研究纳入了 2021 年 11 月至 2022 年 6 月期间入住日本医科大学医院卒中单元的 210 例急性卒中患者。参与者的平均年龄为 79.2±7.4 岁。评估了年龄、性别、发病前衰弱、体质指数(BMI)、卒中类型、既往病史和入院时的国立卫生研究院卒中量表(NIHSS)评分。衰弱定义为临床衰弱量表(CFS)评分≥5 分。计算了所有患者的衰弱患病率,并使用改良 Rankin 量表评估出院时的功能残疾评分。
所有卒中患者的总体衰弱患病率为 31%,首发和复发性卒中分别为 24%和 47%。发病前衰弱、入院时 NIHSS 评分、年龄、卒中类型、既往卒中、性别、BMI、血脂异常和心房颤动与出院时的功能残疾显著相关。Logistic 回归分析显示,CFS 评分、入院时 NIHSS 评分和既往卒中是出院时功能残疾的独立预测因素。
大约四分之一的首发卒中患者存在发病前衰弱;而复发性卒中患者的这一比例增加到了二分之一;这些比率似乎比健康人群的比率高得多。发病前衰弱是影响出院时功能残疾的负面独立因素,对急性卒中患者的发病前衰弱评估和康复干预很重要。