Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India

Background: Stroke burden continues to grow; ischemic subtypes share the biggest pie. Assam is one of the states with the highest burden in-terms of mortality. Aim: In Assam, we studied factors operating at different timelines concerning stroke events in 119 stroke patients to identify entry points...

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Main Authors: Glennys Carvalho, Debabrata Goswami, Abdul Barik Ahmed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2024-12-01
Series:Indian Journal of Community and Family Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/ijcfm.ijcfm_113_24
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author Glennys Carvalho
Debabrata Goswami
Abdul Barik Ahmed
author_facet Glennys Carvalho
Debabrata Goswami
Abdul Barik Ahmed
author_sort Glennys Carvalho
collection DOAJ
description Background: Stroke burden continues to grow; ischemic subtypes share the biggest pie. Assam is one of the states with the highest burden in-terms of mortality. Aim: In Assam, we studied factors operating at different timelines concerning stroke events in 119 stroke patients to identify entry points for policy-level interventions. Material and Methods: We used the National Institute of Health Stroke Score (NIHSS) at admission to assess stroke severity and the Modified Rankin Scale and Barthel Index of activities of daily living at discharge and day 30 after onset to study the functional outcomes. Mortality data were captured until day 30 of stroke onset, and epidemiological data on risk factors and other determinants was collected using a questionnaire. Results: In our study, the majority (55.5%) of patients admitted with stroke were in the age group of 51–70 years, while 9.2% were below 40 years. Only 2.5% of cases reached the hospital within 4.5 h; about 42% had multimorbidity. Hypertension was a major risk factor along with dyslipidemia. Nearly 18% had wake-up strokes, and a similar proportion had a cerebrovascular event in the past. Those with higher NIHSS scores had a higher risk of dying, and if they survived, they had a higher risk of poor functional outcomes at day 30. Women experienced a higher proportion of mortality than men and more so during the posthospitalization period. Conclusion: The epidemiological data obtained from this study helps provide insights into some of the determinants in the pre- and post-period of the stroke event, especially in resource-limited areas; as a part of ongoing surveillance, such data can help monitor temporal trends.
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spelling doaj-art-b63371e90c214a508f3a8a31b52b9bde2025-01-07T05:57:57ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Community and Family Medicine2395-21132666-31202024-12-01102818810.4103/ijcfm.ijcfm_113_24Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east IndiaGlennys CarvalhoDebabrata GoswamiAbdul Barik AhmedBackground: Stroke burden continues to grow; ischemic subtypes share the biggest pie. Assam is one of the states with the highest burden in-terms of mortality. Aim: In Assam, we studied factors operating at different timelines concerning stroke events in 119 stroke patients to identify entry points for policy-level interventions. Material and Methods: We used the National Institute of Health Stroke Score (NIHSS) at admission to assess stroke severity and the Modified Rankin Scale and Barthel Index of activities of daily living at discharge and day 30 after onset to study the functional outcomes. Mortality data were captured until day 30 of stroke onset, and epidemiological data on risk factors and other determinants was collected using a questionnaire. Results: In our study, the majority (55.5%) of patients admitted with stroke were in the age group of 51–70 years, while 9.2% were below 40 years. Only 2.5% of cases reached the hospital within 4.5 h; about 42% had multimorbidity. Hypertension was a major risk factor along with dyslipidemia. Nearly 18% had wake-up strokes, and a similar proportion had a cerebrovascular event in the past. Those with higher NIHSS scores had a higher risk of dying, and if they survived, they had a higher risk of poor functional outcomes at day 30. Women experienced a higher proportion of mortality than men and more so during the posthospitalization period. Conclusion: The epidemiological data obtained from this study helps provide insights into some of the determinants in the pre- and post-period of the stroke event, especially in resource-limited areas; as a part of ongoing surveillance, such data can help monitor temporal trends.https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/ijcfm.ijcfm_113_24assamepidemiologyfunctional outcomesischemic strokemortalitynational institute of health stroke score
spellingShingle Glennys Carvalho
Debabrata Goswami
Abdul Barik Ahmed
Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India
Indian Journal of Community and Family Medicine
assam
epidemiology
functional outcomes
ischemic stroke
mortality
national institute of health stroke score
title Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India
title_full Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India
title_fullStr Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India
title_short Assessment of Stroke Severity And Mortality (ASSAM): A hospital-based study from north-east India
title_sort assessment of stroke severity and mortality assam a hospital based study from north east india
topic assam
epidemiology
functional outcomes
ischemic stroke
mortality
national institute of health stroke score
url https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/ijcfm.ijcfm_113_24
work_keys_str_mv AT glennyscarvalho assessmentofstrokeseverityandmortalityassamahospitalbasedstudyfromnortheastindia
AT debabratagoswami assessmentofstrokeseverityandmortalityassamahospitalbasedstudyfromnortheastindia
AT abdulbarikahmed assessmentofstrokeseverityandmortalityassamahospitalbasedstudyfromnortheastindia