van Allen Zachary M, Orsholits Dan, Boisgontier Matthieu P
School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Perley Health Centre of Excellence in Frailty-Informed Care, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Phys Ther. 2024 Oct 2;104(10). doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzae094.
In the chronic phase after a stroke, limitations in basic activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) initially plateau before steadily increasing. The benefits of prestroke physical activity on these limitations remain unclear. To clarify this relationship, the effect of physical activity on the long-term evolution of functional limitations in a cohort of people with stroke compared to a cohort of matched adults without stroke was examined.
Longitudinal data from 2143 people with stroke and 10,717 adults without stroke aged 50 years and older were drawn from a prospective cohort study based on the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (2004-2022; eight data collection waves). Physical activity was assessed in the prestroke wave. Functional limitations were assessed in the poststroke waves. Each person with stroke was matched with five adults without stroke who had similar propensity scores computed on the basis of key covariates, including baseline age, sex, body mass index, limitations in ADLs and IADLs, chronic conditions, and country of residence, before any of the participants from either cohort had experienced a stroke.
Results showed an interaction between stroke status and physical activity on ADL limitations (b = -0.076; 95% CI = -0.142 to -0.011), with the beneficial effect of physical activity being stronger in people with stroke (b = -0.345; 95% CI = -0.438 to -0.252) than in adults without stroke (b = -0.269; 95% CI = -0.269 to -0.241).
The beneficial effect of prestroke physical activity on ADL limitations after stroke is stronger than its effect in matched adults without stroke followed for a similar number of years.
Physical activity, an intervention within the physical therapist's scope of practice, is effective in reducing the risk of functional dependence after stroke. Moreover, prestroke levels of physical activity can inform the prognosis of functional dependence in people with stroke.
在中风后的慢性期,基本日常生活活动(ADL)和工具性日常生活活动(IADL)的受限情况最初会趋于平稳,随后逐渐增加。中风前身体活动对这些受限情况的益处仍不明确。为阐明这种关系,研究了与一组匹配的无中风成年人相比,身体活动对中风患者队列中功能受限长期演变的影响。
从基于欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查(2004 - 2022年;八次数据收集波次)的前瞻性队列研究中提取了2143名50岁及以上中风患者和10717名无中风成年人的纵向数据。在中风前的波次中评估身体活动情况。在中风后的波次中评估功能受限情况。在两个队列的任何参与者发生中风之前,根据关键协变量(包括基线年龄、性别、体重指数、ADL和IADL受限情况、慢性病以及居住国家)计算倾向得分,为每一名中风患者匹配五名无中风成年人,他们具有相似的倾向得分。
结果显示中风状态与身体活动在ADL受限方面存在交互作用(b = -0.076;95%置信区间 = -0.142至 -0.011),身体活动对中风患者(b = -0.345;95%置信区间 = -0.438至 -0.252)的有益影响比对无中风成年人(b = -0.269;95%置信区间 = -0.269至 -0.241)更强。
中风前身体活动对中风后ADL受限的有益影响比对随访年限相似的匹配无中风成年人的影响更强。
身体活动作为物理治疗师执业范围内的一种干预措施,对于降低中风后功能依赖风险是有效的。此外,中风前的身体活动水平可为中风患者功能依赖的预后提供参考。