BackgroundStudying the impact of demographic changes and progress in the management of stroke patients is necessary in order to organize care structures for the coming years. Consequently, we analyzed the prognostic trends of patients admitted to the Stroke Unit of a tertiary hospital in the last ten years.MethodsThe University Clinical Hospital of Santiago de Compostela is the referral hospital for stroke in a catchment area that accounts for 16.5% of the population of Galicia. Data from patients admitted to the Stroke Unit were registered prospectively. A multinomial logistic regression was performed to determine the influence of new trends in demographic factors and in the management of patients with acute stroke. For the expected trend of progression, a 2008–2011 and 2012–2017 time series model was made by selecting the most appropriate model.ResultsIn the last 10 years, the age of stroke onset has only increased in women (from 74.4 ± 2.2 years in 2008 to 78.8 ± 2.1 years in 2017; p = 0.037), and the same happens with the severity of neurological symptoms (ischemic stroke (IS), p < 0.0001; from 14 [10, 19] in 2008 to 19 [15, 26] in 2017), with a higher percentage of cardioembolic strokes (40.7% vs. 32.2% of cardioembolic strokes in women vs. men, p < 0.0001). In a multiple linear regression model, hospital improvement was mainly associated with the use of reperfusion treatment (B 53.11, CI 95% 49.87, 56.36, p < 0.0001). A differentiated multinomial logistic regression analysis conducted for the whole sample with ischemic strokes in the two time periods (2008–2011 and 2012–2017) showed no differences in the influence of factors associated with higher morbidity and mortality. The modeling of time series showed a distinct falling trend in mortality, with a slight increase in good outcome as well as morbidity in both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.ConclusionsOur results showed that mortality decreased in the entire sample; however, although outcome at discharge improved in ischemic stroke, severe disability also increased in these patients. Importantly, this tendency towards increased morbidity seems to be confirmed for the coming years.
[Purpose] This study aimed to determine the predictive values of the trunk control test
(TCT) and functional ambulation category (FAC) for independent walking up to 6 months post
stroke. [Subjects] Twenty-seven subjects with hemiplegia secondary to a unilateral
hemisphere stroke were included. [Methods] The protocol was started at 45 days post
stroke, with the TCT and FAC as walking predictors. At 90, 120, and 180 days post stroke,
the subjects’ independent walking ability was assessed by using the Wald test. [Results]
The TCT was identified as an independent predictor of ambulation at 90, 120, and 180 days.
Subjects who scored ≥ 49 in the initial test had 93.8% probability of achieving
independent gait at 6 months. The FAC proved that 100% of the subjects who scored 2 at 45
days post stroke walked independently at 90 days, 100% of the subjects who scored 1 walked
independently at 120 days, and only 33.3% of the subjects who scored 0 walked
independently at 180 days. [Conclusion] The TCT and FAC can predict independent walking at
45 days post stroke. In subjects with FAC 0, the TCT should be used to predict patients
who will be able to walk independently.
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