Stroke, Vol 19, 181-184, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
OI Ahmed, TJ Orchard, R Sharma, H Mitchell and E Talbot
Mortality rates for stroke in 1971, 1974, 1977, and 1980 were obtained for
residents of Allegheny County in western Pennsylvania. Hospital case
fatality ratios were also obtained in the same 4 years for those discharged
with the diagnosis of stroke (ICD 430-438 of the Eighth and Ninth Revisions
of the International Classification of Disease) in two large hospitals
(greater than 400 beds). Age-adjusted mortality rates per 100,000
population have declined significantly in this period for the whole county
as well as for the four sex-race groups. Case fatality ratio in the two
hospitals of the study has decreased from 19.6 to 11%. A change in the
severity of the disease manifested by a reduction in the number of comatose
patients has occurred, and this reduction in comatose patients was
responsible for greater than 80% of the decline in case fatality ratio.
Coma appears to be the best predictor of mortality among hospitalized
stroke cases (r = 0.6, p less than 0.00001). The recent introduction of
computed tomography for the diagnosis of stroke in the late 1970s was
accompanied by a twofold increase in the survivorship of stroke patients.
However, this increase in survivorship may reflect selection bias and is
based on ecological association. Further studies are needed to examine the
role of computed tomography in improving survival.
ARTICLES
Declining mortality from stroke in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Trends in case fatality and severity of disease, 1971-1980
Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
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