Background and Purpose-Although diabetes is a strong risk factor for stroke, it is still unclear whether stroke subtype, severity, and prognosis are different in diabetic and nondiabetic patients. We sought to evaluate stroke features, prognosis, and functional outcome in patients with diabetes compared with patients without diabetes. Methods-In a European Union Concerted Action involving 7 countries and 4537 patients hospitalized for a first-in-a-lifetime stroke, defined according to the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project criteria, we collected data on demographics, risk factors, clinical presentation, and outcome. We used logistic regression to examine the relationship between diabetes and outcome at 3 months (disability, handicap, and death), controlling for risk factors, clinical presentation, and demographics. Results-Overall, diabetes was present in 937 patients (21%). Diabetic patients, compared with those without diabetes, were more likely to have limb weakness (PϽ0.02), dysarthria (PϽ0.001), ischemic stroke (PϽ0.001), and lacunar cerebral infarction (Pϭ0.03). At 3 months, the case fatality rates were not higher in the diabetic groups (Pϭ0.33). Handicap (Rankin Scale) and disability (Barthel Index) were significantly higher in diabetic patients (Pϭ0.005 and Pϭ0.016, respectively). Conclusions-Stroke in diabetic patients has a specific clinical pattern and a poor prognosis in terms of motor function, which emphasizes the need for early diagnosis and treatment of every case of diabetes.
The study demonstrates that clinical-radiological causes and outcome of cardio-embolic infarcts in a population-based study correspond to a well-identified stroke pattern. Cardio-embolic infarcts was diagnosed in 882 cases (37.9%) of 2,330 consecutive first-ever stroke patients included in a prospective population-based stroke registry over a 14-year period (1985-1997). Thirty-three criteria out of 98 were introduced into a monovariate analysis and the significant variable were introduced into a multivariate analysis to identify significant criteria to define stroke patterns in cardio-embolic infarction. Cardiac sources of embolus included atrial arrhythmia, valvular heart disease (19%), and cardiac failure (18%). Patients with cardio-embolic infarction showed a significantly higher rate of female predominance (p < 0.001), history of ischemic heart disease (p < 0.001), acute stroke onset (p < 0.05), headache (p < 0.05), previous treatment by anti-platelets and anti-K-vitamin (p < 0.001), Wernicke aphasia (p < 0.001), severe deficit (p < 0.001) and death (p < 0.001). After a logistic procedure, female gender and ischemic heart disease were the two independent risk factors associated with cardio-embolic stroke. Cardio-embolic stroke is a specific subtype of stroke with its own clinical, radiological, etiological and prognostic characteristics. In the acute stage, it is necessary to identify quickly this type of stroke because of severe prognosis and appropriate treatment.
Studies have shown significant variation in stroke case fatality across Europe. These variations suggest the need to explore whether differences in physiological support in acute stroke exist across Europe. Data were collected in four European centres over 6 months. These included clinical status and management of acute physiology (hydration, oxygenation, nutrition, hypertension, hyperglycaemia and temperature in the first week of ischaemic stroke) and survival at 3 months. Differences in acute supportive care between centres were adjusted for case mix. Patients admitted to centres in London (n = 106), Dijon (n = 95), Erlangen (n = 91) and Warsaw (n = 72) were studied. There were significant differences in incontinence, dysphasia, dysphagia, conscious level, pyrexia, hyperglycaemia and comorbidity between centres. After adjusting for case mix, there were significant differences in intravenous fluid use (P = 0.04), enteral feeding (P = 0.003), initiation of new antihypertensive therapy (P = 0.0006) and insulin therapy (P = 0.004) between centres, with the London centre having the lowest uptake of interventions. Three-month case fatality rates varied from 10 to 28%. This pilot study shows significant variation in acute physiological support in acute stroke across four European centres, which remains unexplained by case mix. Further research is required to link variation in acute care with stroke outcome, to identify which interventions appear to be the most effective.
The population study used determines the features of the course of strokes or the so-called stroke pattern in patients with cardio-embolic infarction. In a prospective population study for 14 years (1985-1997), cardio-embolic infarction was diagnosed in 882 (37.9%) of 2330 patients who had had the first acute cerebrovascular accident.
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