Stroke, Vol 18, 565-569, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
L LaRue, M Alter, SM Lai, G Friday, E Sobel, L Levitt, R McCoy and T Isack
A population-based study of the relation between hematocrit and stroke
subtype was carried out among 2,077 individuals using the Lehigh Valley
Stroke Register. This register identifies all stroke patients admitted to
the 8 acute care hospitals serving the Lehigh Valley area of eastern
Pennsylvania-western New Jersey. The mean hematocrit was higher in patients
with lacunes than with thrombotic or embolic strokes (p = 0.02). However,
when blood pressure was also considered the increase in hematocrit in
patients with lacunar stroke was significant only when systolic
hypertension (greater than or equal to 150 mm Hg) was also present (p =
0.029); no significant difference in hematocrit was found between stroke
subtypes in normotensive individuals. Therefore, we cannot exclude the
possibility that hypertension interacts with hematocrit in accounting for
the observed association with lacunar infarcts. There was no trend for
increased in-hospital mortality for stroke patients in either the low (less
than or equal to 30, 30-36%) or high (greater than or equal to 47%)
hematocrit groups.
ARTICLES
Acute stroke, hematocrit, and blood pressure
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