YOU have to change the mindset of your doctors, researchers and stroke hospital from the nihilism of failure to recover predictions to: This is how we are going to get you recovered. THIS IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY, your stroke medical team has abandoned your possibility of recovery, so you just have to accept their failure to do their job. Hope you like your options of disability or death!
The Intracerebral Hemorrhage Score Overestimates Mortality in Young Adults
Published:July 08, 2021DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2021.105963
Abstract
Objective
To determine whether the intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) score is accurate in predicting
30-day mortality in young adults, we calculated the ICH score for 156 young adults
(aged 18-45) with primary spontaneous ICH and compared predicted to observed 30-day
mortality rates.
Methods
We retrospectively reviewed all patients aged 18-45 consecutively presenting to the
University of Iowa from 2009 to 2019 with ICH. We calculated the ICH score and recorded
its individual subcomponents for each patient. Poisson regression was used to test
the association of ICH score components with 30-day mortality.
Results
We identified 156 patients who met the inclusion criteria; mean± standard deviation
(SD) age was 35±8 years. The 30-day mortality rate was 15% (n=24). The ICH score was
predictive of 30-day mortality for each unit increase (p= 0.04 for trend), but the
observed mortality rates for each ICH score varied considerably from the original
ICH score predictions. Most notably, the 30-day mortality rates for ICH scores of
1, 2, and 3 are predicted to be 13%, 26%, and 72% respectively, but were observed
in our population to be 0%, 3%, and 41%. An ICH volume of >30cc [relative risk (RR)
28, 95% confidence intervals (CI) 3-315, p=0.01] and a GCS score of <5 (RR 13, 95%
CI 0.1-1176, p=0.01) were independently associated with 30-day mortality.
Conclusions
The ICH score tends to overestimate mortality in young adults. ICH volume and GCS
score are the most relevant items in predicting mortality at 30 days in young adults.(Do you tell your patients you have predicted mortality and have given up on their treatment?)
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