Brain Sciences (Aug 2022)

Higher Plasma Fibrinogen Level at Admission Is Associated with Post-Stroke Depression at Discharge

  • Juehua Zhu,
  • Li Wang,
  • Han Shao,
  • Xiang Tang,
  • Lulu Zhang,
  • Yun Zhou,
  • Yongjun Jiang,
  • Qi Fang,
  • Xiuying Cai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12081032
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 1032

Abstract

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Background: Post-stroke depression (PSD) is a common complication of stroke, which seriously affects the functional outcome of patients. Systemic low-grade inflammation associated with PSD has been shown to occur at several months to years, however, whether these inflammatory markers predicted PSD at an acute stage of stroke is controversial. Method: A total of 625 patients with acute ischemic stroke (219 female, 35.40%) were included in this study. PSD was diagnosed using the 17-item Hamilton depression scale (HAMD) at 7 days following discharge (7–14 days after stroke onset). Multivariable logistic regression analysis was applied to build a prediction model for PSD at discharge. Discrimination and calibration of the model were assessed by C-index, calibration plot. Internal validation was conducted using bootstrapping validation. Results: At discharge of hospitalization, 95 patients (15.20%) were diagnosed with PSD. Multivariable logistic regression suggested that female gender (OR = 2.043, 95% CI = 1.287–3.245, p = 0.002), baseline NIHSS (OR = 1.108, 95% CI = 1.055–1.165, p p = 0.002) were independent predictors for PSD at discharge. The cut-off of the fibrinogen plasma level was 3.08 g/L. These predictors were included in the nomogram. The model displayed good discrimination, with a C-index of 0.730 (95% CI = 0.683–0.777) and good calibration. Conclusion: Female gender, baseline stroke severity and a higher level of fibrinogen were independently associated with PSD at discharge. A nomogram based on these three predictors can be used to provide an individual, visual prediction of the risk probability of PSD.

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