中风幸存者的功能限制:中风前的身体活动很重要。

Zack van Allen, Dan Orsholits, Matthieu P Boisgontier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:在中风后的慢性期,日常生活活动能力(ADL)和工具性ADL(IADL)的限制最初趋于平稳,然后稳步增加。然而,中风前的体育活动水平对这些限制的益处尚不清楚。为了阐明这种关系,本研究比较了体育活动对中风幸存者和无中风对照者I/ADL限制的长期演变的影响。方法:从欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查(SHARE;2004-2020)中获得2143名中风幸存者和10717名50岁及以上匹配的无中风对照的纵向数据。根据卒中事件前的波动和卒中后慢性期I/ADL限制的数量评估身体活动。每个中风幸存者与5名无中风对照组进行匹配,这些对照组具有相似的倾向得分,这些得分是基于关键协变量计算的。使用根据年龄、性别、教育水平和慢性病数量调整的线性混合效应模型,将卒中前体育活动对卒中幸存者I/ADL限制的影响与其在无卒中对照组中的影响进行比较,在体育活动和I/ADL评估之间具有相似的时滞。结果:在卒中幸存者中,卒中前体育活动对卒中后ADL限制的有益影响明显强于在任何参与者经历卒中之前,与基线年龄、性别、体重指数、I/ADL限制、慢性病和居住国相匹配的无卒中对照组。结论:体育活动是一种有效的预防性干预措施,可以降低中风后功能依赖的风险。此外,卒中前的体力活动水平是卒中后功能依赖预后的一个重要变量。数据:http://www.share-project.org/data-access.htmlhttps://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w1.600https://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w2.600https://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w4.600https://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w5.600https://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w6.600https://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w7.711https://doi.org/10.6103/SHARE.w8.800.Code:https://github.com/matthieuboisgontier/Stroke_Physical-Activity.
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Pre-stroke physical activity matters for functional limitations: A longitudinal case-control study of 12,860 participants.

Objective: In the chronic phase after a stroke, limitations in activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental ADL (IADLs) initially plateau before steadily increasing. The benefits of pre-stroke physical activity on these limitations remain unclear. To clarify this relationship, we examined the effect of physical activity on the long-term evolution of functional limitations in a cohort of stroke survivors and compared it to a cohort of matched stroke-free adults.

Methods: Longitudinal data from 2,143 stroke survivors and 10,717 stroke-free adults aged 50 years and older were drawn from a prospective cohort study based on the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (2004-2022; 8 data collection waves). Physical activity was assessed in the pre-stroke wave. Functional limitations were assessed in the post-stroke waves. Each stroke survivor was matched with 5 stroke-free adults who had similar propensity scores computed on the basis of key covariates, including baseline age, sex, body mass index, limitations in ADL and IADL, chronic conditions and country of residence, before any of the participants from either cohort had experienced a stroke.

Results: Results showed an interaction between stroke status and physical activity on ADL limitations (b = -0.076; 95% CI = -0.142 to -0.011), with the effect of physical activity being stronger in stroke survivors (b = -0.345, 95% CI = -0.438 to -0.252) than in stroke-free adults (b = -0.269, 95% CI = -0.269 to -0.241).

Conclusion: The beneficial effect of pre-stroke physical activity on ADL limitations after stroke is stronger than its effect in matched stroke-free adults followed for a similar number of years.

Impact: Physical activity, an intervention within the physical therapist's scope of practice, is effective in reducing the risk of functional dependence after stroke. Moreover, pre-stroke levels of physical activity can inform the prognosis of functional dependence in stroke survivors.

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