Publication | Open Access
Death and functional outcome after spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage. A prospective study of 166 cases using multivariate analysis.
399
Citations
15
References
1991
Year
PrognosisCerebrovascular DiseaseFunctional OutcomeNeurovascular DiseaseSpontaneous Intracerebral HemorrhageStroke RehabilitationStrokeBrain InjuryNeurologyCerebrovascular InterventionBleeding DisorderNeuropathologyHemorrhage SizeOutcomes ResearchFunctional StatusCerebral Blood FlowPrognostic EvaluationIschemic StrokePatient SafetyStroke-related ConditionEnd PointsMedicineMultivariate AnalysisEmergency Medicine
Using death and functional status as end points, we prospectively analyzed the outcome 6 months after spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage in 166 patients admitted to an acute-care stroke unit on the first day of their stroke. Seventy-one patients (43%) died, 69 (42%) had a satisfactory outcome, and 26 (16%) had a poor functional outcome. Early (30-day) survival was correlated with morphologic parameters on the initial computed tomogram (hemorrhage size, midline shift, and intraventricular spread of the hemorrhage), while later (6-month) survival was correlated with age. Using logistic regression, we found five independent predictors of satisfactory outcome at 6 months: age, hemorrhage size, intraventricular spread of the hemorrhage, limb paresis, and communication disorders. Of these, age was the most important predictor by far.
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