Saturday, December 15, 2018

Less Than Ideal Trends in Cardiovascular Health Among US Stroke Survivors

You can COMPLETELY BLAME your doctors and stroke hospital. You are not gotten to 100% recovery thus not being able to do enough physical activity.   You have NO diet protocol, so no healthy diet.  NO diet protocol for natural blood pressure  and cholesterol control.  This is all your doctors responsibility, don't let them deflect responsibility by quoting this asinine response; 'All strokes are different, all stroke recoveries are different'.

Less Than Ideal - Trends in Cardiovascular Health Among US Stroke Survivors


Originally publishedStroke. 2018;0:STROKEAHA.118.022644

Background and Purpose—

The American Heart Association’s Life’s Simple 7 (LS7) defines ideal cardiovascular health by 7 metrics: not smoking, regular physical activity, normal body mass index, blood pressure, plasma glucose, and total cholesterol levels, and a healthy diet. We assessed prevalence and predictors of ideal LS7 among US stroke survivors.

Methods—

Among 67 514 participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys from 1988 to 1994 and 1999 to 2014, 1597 adults (≥18 years) had self-reported history of stroke. LS7 metrics were categorized as poor, intermediate, and ideal; ideal LS7 scores were calculated (1 point for each ideal metric met). Trends in poor, intermediate, and ideal cardiovascular health were assessed. Odds of low (0–1) versus high (≥4) ideal LS7 scores were assessed according to sex, race, poverty income ratio, and education level, before and after adjusting for covariates.

Results—

Only 1 participant met all ideal LS7 metrics. The proportion with low LS7 score increased from 17.9% in 1988 to 1994 to 35.4% in 2011 to 2014 (P<0.001). Over that time frame, prevalence of poor blood pressure (≥140/90 mm Hg) and poor cholesterol (≥240 mg/dL) decreased (45.2%–26.5% and 37.2%–10.3%), whereas prevalence of poor body mass index (≥30 kg/m2), poor diet (healthy eating index score <50), and poor physical activity (0 minutes moderate/vigorous activity per week) increased (26.9%–39.0%; 14.2%–50.6%; 44.6%–70.9%; all P<0.05). After adjustment, black race (odds ratio, 2.29; 95% CI, 1.17–4.48), poverty income ratio ≤200% (odds ratio, 2.20, 95% CI, 1.11–4.36), and ≤12th grade education (odds ratio, 4.50; 95% CI, 2.27–8.92) were associated with low ideal LS7 scores.

Conclusions—

Over the past 3 decades, blood pressure and cholesterol control among stroke survivors improved, but rates of obesity, poor diet, and physical inactivity increased. Stroke survivors who are black, poor, or less educated are less likely to have ideal cardiovascular health.

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