Stroke presentation and outcome in developing countries - A prospective study in The Gambia

被引:93
作者
Garbusinski, JM
van der Sande, MAB
Bartholome, EJ
Dramaix, M
Gaye, A
Coleman, R
Nyan, OA
Walker, RW
McAdam, KPWJ
Walraven, GE
机构
[1] MRC Labs, Fajara, Gambia
[2] Univ Libre Bruxelles, Ecole Sante Publ, Hop Erasme, Lab Stat Med,Serv Neurol, Brussels, Belgium
[3] Royal Victoria Teaching Hosp, Banjul, Gambia
关键词
Africa; developing countries; prognosis; recovery of function; social support; stroke; stroke outcome;
D O I
10.1161/01.STR.0000170717.91591.7d
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background and Purpose - Despite increasing burden of stroke in Africa, prospective descriptive data are rare. Our objective was to describe, in The Gambia, the clinical outcome of stroke patients admitted to the Royal Victoria Teaching Hospital in the capital Banjul, to assess mortality and morbidity, and propose preventive and therapeutic measures. Methods - Prospective data were collected on consecutive patients older than 15 years old admitted between February 2000 and February 2001 with the diagnosis of nonsubarachnoid stroke. Risk factors, clinical characteristics, and social consequences were assessed using a modified National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (mNIHSS), the Barthel Activity in Daily Living scale, the Siriraj score for subtypes, and the Bamford criteria for location/extension. Patients were followed-up at home up to 1 year after discharge. Results - Ninety-one percent (148/162) of eligible patients were enrolled and followed-up. Hypertension and smoking were the most prevalent risk factors. Severity was high at admission, especially in women, and was strongly correlated to the outcome. mNIHSS and consciousness level on admission were strong predictors of the mortality risk. Swallowing difficulties at admission, fever, lung infection, and no aspirin treatment were, independently, risk factors for a lethal outcome susceptible to being addressed by treatment. Mortality was 41 % in-hospital and 62 % after 1 year. In survivors, autonomy levels improved over time. Drug compliance was poor. At home, family members provided care. Long-term socioeconomic and cultural activities were affected in most patients. Conclusions - Case-fatality was high compared with Western cohorts. Preventive measures can be developed. Rational treatment, in the absence of head imaging for initial assessment, requires adapted protocols. Providers should be trained, both at hospital and community levels.
引用
收藏
页码:1388 / 1393
页数:6
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]   Can a clinical score aid in early diagnosis and treatment of various stroke syndromes? [J].
Akpunonu, BE ;
Mutgi, AB ;
Lee, L ;
Khuder, S ;
Federman, DJ ;
Roberts, C .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES, 1998, 315 (03) :194-198
[2]   A PROSPECTIVE-STUDY OF ACUTE CEREBROVASCULAR-DISEASE IN THE COMMUNITY - THE OXFORDSHIRE-COMMUNITY-STROKE-PROJECT 1981-86 .1. METHODOLOGY, DEMOGRAPHY AND INCIDENT CASES OF 1ST-EVER STROKE [J].
BAMFORD, J ;
SANDERCOCK, P ;
DENNIS, M ;
WARLOW, C ;
JONES, L ;
MCPHERSON, K ;
VESSEY, M ;
FOWLER, G ;
MOLYNEUX, A ;
HUGHES, T ;
BURN, J ;
WADE, D .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1988, 51 (11) :1373-1380
[3]   MEASUREMENTS OF ACUTE CEREBRAL INFARCTION - A CLINICAL EXAMINATION SCALE [J].
BROTT, T ;
ADAMS, HP ;
OLINGER, CP ;
MARLER, JR ;
BARSAN, WG ;
BILLER, J ;
SPILKER, J ;
HOLLERAN, R ;
EBERLE, R ;
HERTZBERG, V ;
RORICK, M ;
MOOMAW, CJ ;
WALKER, M .
STROKE, 1989, 20 (07) :864-870
[4]   CAST: Randomised placebo-controlled trial of early aspirin use in 20,000 patients with acute ischaemic stroke [J].
Chen, ZM ;
Hui, JM ;
Liu, LS ;
Liu, ZM ;
Peto, R ;
Sandercock, P ;
Wang, WQ ;
Wang, YX ;
Wang, ZB ;
Xie, JX ;
You, GX ;
Zhang, FL ;
Zhang, HQ ;
Zhao, ZY .
LANCET, 1997, 349 (9066) :1641-1649
[5]   Indications for early aspirin use in acute ischemic stroke - A combined analysis of 40 000 randomized patients from the Chinese Acute Stroke Trial and the International Stroke Trial [J].
Chen, ZM ;
Sandercock, P ;
Pan, HC ;
Counsell, C ;
Collins, R ;
Liu, LS ;
Xie, JX ;
Warlow, C ;
Peto, R .
STROKE, 2000, 31 (06) :1240-1249
[6]   Use of the original, modified, or new intracerebral hemorrhage score to predict mortality and morbidity after intracerebral hemorrhage [J].
Cheung, RTF ;
Zou, LY .
STROKE, 2003, 34 (07) :1717-1722
[7]   A predictive risk model for outcomes of ischemic stroke [J].
Johnston, KC ;
Connors, AF ;
Wagner, DP ;
Knaus, WA ;
Wang, XQ ;
Haley, EC .
STROKE, 2000, 31 (02) :448-455
[8]  
Kahn K, 1999, S AFR MED J, V89, P63
[9]   Alternative strategies for stroke care: a prospective randomised controlled trial [J].
Kalra, L ;
Evans, A ;
Perez, I ;
Knapp, M ;
Donaldson, N ;
Swift, CG .
LANCET, 2000, 356 (9233) :894-899
[10]   Stroke in a Biracial Population - The excess burden of stroke among blacks [J].
Kissela, B ;
Schneider, A ;
Kleindorfer, D ;
Khoury, J ;
Miller, R ;
Alwell, K ;
Woo, D ;
Szaflarski, J ;
Gebel, J ;
Moomaw, C ;
Pancioli, A ;
Jauch, E ;
Shukla, R ;
Broderick, J .
STROKE, 2004, 35 (02) :426-431