Stroke, Vol 14, 703-709, Copyright © 1983 by American Heart Association
P Solzi, H Ring, T Najenson and Y Luz
Scanning 3000 cases admitted for rehabilitation after cerebrovascular
accident over a 20 year period produced a sample of 1369 subjects, without
age restrictions, admitted within six months of a first stroke of
thrombotic etiology. In this sample, survival rates showed no significant
difference between men and women. Age at onset, however, clearly influenced
survival changes; the expected mean survival was 6 years at 40 and 2 at age
80; average loss of life was 14 years for the whole sample, meaning a vital
prognosis two to three times worse than that of the general population. At
least 86% of the sample presented one or more of five etiological
antecedents to stroke: hypertensive heart disease, peripheral vascular
disease, diabetes mellitus, myocardial infarction and atrial fibrillation.
In 87% of those, HHD and/or PVD were present. Presence of hypertension
significantly lowered life expectancy and so did PVD; their influence is
felt from the earliest stages. In contrast, diabetes mellitus, the next
most common factor, has a late influence, starting about the fifth year
after stroke. MI and AF were present in relatively fewer patients, but they
contributed towards a considerable decrease in life expectancy, evident
from the first stages, the more drastic reduction being observed in the AF
group.
ARTICLES
Hemiplegics after a first stroke: late survival and risk factors
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