So you described a problem; DID NOTHING TO SOLVE IT! You're fired! Tons of dead wood needs to be removed in stroke!
Incidence and Outcomes of Patients With Early Cardiac Complications After Intracerebral Hemorrhage: A Report From VISTA
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The
incidence and outcomes of early cardiac complications in patients with
intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) are poorly understood. These cardiac
complications may be part of the so-called stroke-heart syndrome in
patients with ICH. We investigated this issue in an individual patient
data pooled analysis from an international repository of clinical trial
data.
METHODS:
We
used the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive to investigate the
incidence of cardiac complications within 30 days post-ICH or acute
ischemic stroke (AIS). These complications included acute coronary
syndrome encompassing myocardial injury, heart failure/left ventricular
dysfunction, atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter, other arrhythmia/ECG
abnormalities, and cardiorespiratory arrest. We used propensity score
matching to compare the incidence of patients with stroke-heart syndrome
in patients with ICH with those following AIS. Factors associated with
90-day mortality were evaluated using multivariate logistic regression
analysis in the ICH cohort.
RESULTS:
We
pooled data from 8698 participants recruited in acute stroke trials
(mean age, 68±12 years; 56% male), of whom 914 (11%) were patients with
ICH. Among the patients with ICH, 123 (13%) had stroke-heart syndrome in
patients with ICH. Following propensity score matching, a total of 1828
patients (914 for each of the cohorts) were analyzed. While the overall
incidence of cardiac events tended to be lower in the ICH group
compared with the AIS group (the cumulative incidence freedom from the
event, 86.3% [95% CI, 84.1–88.6] versus 83.6% [95% CI, 81.2–86.0]; P=0.100),
the incidences cardiac events other than atrial fibrillation/atrial
flutter were comparable between the 2 matched groups. The incidence of
atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter was significantly lower in the ICH
group than in the AIS group (P<0.001). The
multivariate-adjusted analysis found that stroke-heart syndrome in
patients with ICH was associated with 90-day mortality (adjusted odds
ratio, 1.12 [95% CI, 1.06–1.19]; P<0.001).
CONCLUSIONS:
Cardiac events are common and negatively affect prognosis in patients with ICH, just as seen in AIS.
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