Persisting Consequences of Stroke Measured by the Stroke Impact Scale

S. Lai, S. Studenski, P. Duncan, S. Perera
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引用次数: 606

Abstract

Background and Purpose— The purpose of this study was to compare disability and quality of life as measured by the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) of stroke patients deemed recovered (Barthel Index ≥95) with 2 stroke-free populations of community-dwelling elderly. Methods— Eighty-one stroke patients who participated in the Kansas City Stroke Registry and achieved a Barthel Index of ≥95 at 3 months after stroke and 246 stroke-free subjects enrolled in the Community Elders Study were enrolled in this study. The Community Elders Study group was further divided into 2 groups, those recruited from the Department of Veterans Affairs Health System (VA) and a those from a local health maintenance organization (HMO). Stroke patients were administered the SIS ≈90 days after stroke, and the stroke-free community dwellers were administered a version of the SIS adapted for nonstroke subjects, the Health Impact Scale (HIS). A general linear model was used to examine differences in health outcomes measured by the SIS or HIS between the KCSR stroke patients and VA and HMO community-dwelling elders after controlling for medical comorbidities and demographics. Results— Kansas City Stroke Registry participants were significantly older than the community study groups (P =0.0052). Selected medical conditions were similar among the 3 study groups. Old age and a history of diabetes mellitus were more likely to be associated with more deficits and poor quality of life. In stroke patients deemed recovered, stroke still affected hand function, activities and independent activities of daily living, participation, and overall physical function compared with the stroke-free community dwellers in the HMO health system even after adjustment for age and diabetes status. Stroke-free community dwellers in the VA health system also had worse social participation than the stroke-free community dwellers in the HMO health system. Conclusions— Research and clinicians have consistently underestimated the impact of stroke with the Barthel Index. This has major implications for the design of therapeutic trial designs and adequate assessments of social and economic sequelae of stroke.
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用中风影响量表测量中风的持续后果
背景与目的:本研究的目的是比较脑卒中康复患者(Barthel指数≥95)与2个无脑社区老年人的残疾和生活质量(脑卒中影响量表)。方法:81名参加了堪萨斯城卒中登记并在卒中后3个月Barthel指数≥95的卒中患者和246名参加了社区老年人研究的无卒中受试者被纳入本研究。社区长者研究小组进一步分为两组,一组来自退伍军人事务部卫生系统(VA),另一组来自当地健康维护组织(HMO)。脑卒中患者在脑卒中后约90天接受SIS测试,无脑卒中社区居民接受适用于非脑卒中受试者的SIS版本健康影响量表(HIS)。在控制了医疗合并症和人口统计学因素后,使用一般线性模型来检验KCSR卒中患者与VA和HMO社区居住老年人之间由SIS或HIS测量的健康结局的差异。结果:堪萨斯城卒中登记中心的参与者明显比社区研究组的参与者年龄大(P =0.0052)。3个研究组所选择的医疗条件相似。老年和糖尿病史更可能与更多的缺陷和生活质量差有关。在认为已康复的脑卒中患者中,即使在调整了年龄和糖尿病状况后,与HMO卫生系统中无脑卒中社区居民相比,脑卒中仍会影响手功能、活动和独立的日常生活活动、参与和整体身体功能。VA卫生系统中的无中风社区居民的社会参与程度也低于HMO卫生系统中的无中风社区居民。结论:研究和临床医生一直低估了Barthel指数对中风的影响。这对治疗试验设计的设计和对中风的社会和经济后遗症的充分评估具有重要意义。
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