What is your doctors' protocol to prevent constipation? Or are you being left to figure this out yourself? I was pretty badly stopped up in the hospital, no preventative treatment but suppository after the fact. When the incidence is almost 50% and your doctor does nothing, that to me is incompetence.
Incidence of constipation in stroke patients
A systematic review and meta-analysis
Monitoring Editor: Bappaditya Ray.
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
Abstract
There
is growing awareness of a link between the gut and cardiovascular
disease. Constipation is common among individuals who have had a stroke,
and it negatively affects social functioning and quality of life.
However, no systematic study on the incidence of constipation in stroke
patients has been reported.
We selected studies included
in Medline, Embase, Cochrane database, and Web of Science. Studies were
included if they reported the incidence in stroke patients. Two authors
selected the studies, extracted the data independently, and assessed
these. Subgroup analyses were conducted according to the stroke subtype
and stage of stroke.
After detailed evaluations, 8
studies (n = 1385 participants) were found that contained data that
were suitable for meta-analytic synthesis. A forest plot showed that the
incidence of constipation was 48% (95% confidence interval [CI] =
33%–63%). In the analysis of the type of stroke subgroup, the incidence
of constipation in patients who had had a hemorrhagic stroke (66% [95%
CI = 40–91%]) was higher than that in patients who had experienced an
ischemic stroke (51% [95% CI = 27%–75%]). The incidence in the acute
stage (45% [95% CI = 36%–54%]) was lower than that in the
rehabilitation stage (48% [95% CI = 23%–73%]).
Constipation
after a stroke event occurs frequently. This finding may raise
awareness about bowel complications to allow correct evaluation and
proper management.
Keywords: constipation, incidence, meta-analysis, stroke, systematic review
1. Introduction
Stroke
is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide, representing an
important public health burden with an associated heavy economic burden
for healthcare systems.[1] Report reveals that there were 33 million stroke survivors and 5.9 million stroke-related deaths in 2010.[2]
Stroke produces a wide range of neurological impairments, including
problems of balance, movement, speech, swallowing, urination, and
defecation, all of which contribute to global public health concerns.[3]
Constipation is a common symptom among patients with central nervous system diseases, including stroke,[4]
and it can lead to increased morbidity and mortality. This complication
is a major cause of death in the acute and subacute stroke phases and
can persist in survivors many years after the events.[5–7]
Currently, constipation receives substantially less attention, but this
non-neurological bowel complication following a stroke is associated
with increased length of hospital stay, poor neurological outcome, the
development of further complications, and even death.[4]
There is growing awareness of a link between the gut and cardiovascular disease.[8–10]
Brain injuries, particularly stroke, have been well established as a
cause of gastrointestinal disorders. The mechanism of gastrointestinal
disorders in neurological disease is multifactorial. The brain–gut axis
relates primarily with the association between neurology and the
gastrointestinal system.[11,12]
It is the complicated neuroendocrine network including central nervous
system, enteric nervous system, and autonomic nervous system, which
could maintain brain–gut interactions and the communications for
information of each system.
Although constipation is a
common symptom among patients with central nervous system diseases and
it negatively affects social functioning and quality of life, the
presence and incidence of constipation in patients with stroke remain
poorly investigated.[13,14] No systematic study on the incidence of constipation in stroke patients has been reported thus far.
In
this paper, we present the first systematic review and meta-analysis of
the incidence of constipation after a stroke and highlight the bowel
dysfunction of strokes.
More at link.
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