Intracerebral hemorrhage versus infarction: Stroke severity, risk factors, and prognosis
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Neurology
- Vol. 38 (1), 45-50
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.410380110
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare stroke severity, risk factors, and prognosis in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage versus infarction. We prospectively studied 1,000 unselected patients with acute stroke of a verified type in the Copenhagen Stroke Study. Neurological deficits and functional disabilities were evaluated weekly from the time of acute admission throughout the rehabilitation period. Eighty‐eight (9%) had intracerebral hemorrhage. The relative frequency of intracerebral hemorrhage rose exponentially with increasing stroke severity. In multivariate analyses, stroke type had no influence on mortality, neurological outcome, functional outcome, or the time course of recovery. Initial stroke severity was the all‐important prognostic factor. The relative importance of hypertension and blood pressure on admission was not greater for intracerebral hemorrhage than for infarction. No preponderance was found between type of stroke and sex, age, and smoking. Diabetes, ischemic heart disease, and elevated serum total cholesterol level all favored cerebral infarction as opposed to intracerebral hemorrhage. We conclude that the type of stroke per se has no influence on stroke prognosis in general; the extent of the injury is decisive. The poorer prognosis in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage is due to the increase in frequency of intracerebral hemorrhage with increasing stroke severity. The likelihood of cerebral infarction occuring as opposed to intracerebral hemorrhage seems increased fivefold in stroke patients with diabetes. Hypertension and blood pressure on admission were not predictors of stroke type.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epidemiological Studies and the Prevention of StrokeCerebrovascular Diseases, 1994
- Marked increase of stroke incidence in men between 1972 and 1990 in Frederiksberg, Denmark.Stroke, 1992
- Secular trends in stroke incidence and mortality. The Framingham Study.Stroke, 1992
- SEPIVAC: a community-based study of stroke incidence in Umbria, Italy.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1991
- Incidence rates of stroke in the eighties: the end of the decline in stroke?Stroke, 1989
- Trends for coronary heart disease and stroke and their risk factors in Japan.Circulation, 1989
- Mortality from and incidence of stroke in Stockholm.BMJ, 1986
- The changing pattern of survival following stroke.Stroke, 1983
- Decreasing trend in incidence and mortality from stroke in Hisayama residents, Japan.Stroke, 1981
- Prognostic Factors in the Survival of 1,484 Stroke Cases Observed for 30 to 48 MonthsArchives of Neurology, 1978