The Pan African Medical Journal (Apr 2019)

The prognostic value of serum uric acid in the acute phase of hemorrhagic stroke patients in black Africans

  • Yacouba Njankouo Mapoure,
  • Chia Mark Ayeah,
  • Hamadou Ba,
  • Hugo Bertrand Mbatchou Ngahane,
  • Romuald Hentchoya,
  • Henry Namme Luma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2019.32.165.15107
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 165

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION: Very few studies have been conducted to evaluate the prevalence of hyperuricemia and its impact on the prognosis amongst acute hemorrhagic stroke (AHS) patients. The objectives was to determine the prevalence of hyperuricemia in AHS patients and examined the association between hyperuricemia and stroke outcomes in the Douala General Hospital (DGH). METHODS: this was a hospital based prospective cohort which included AHS patients with baseline SUA levels and 3 months post stroke follow-up data. SUA values were divided into quintiles. Associations between hyperuricemia and stroke outcomes were analyzed using multiple logistic regression and survival analysis (cox regression and Kaplan Meier). RESULTS: a total of 221 AHS patients were reviewed with a mean age of 55.8,11.8 years. The prevalence of hyperuricemia among AHS patients was 34.4% with mean SUA level of 376.8,131.9 ,mol/l. On multivariate analysis, hyperuricemia was not independently associated with early death [(OR = 1.072 (CI: 0.370-3.056; p = 0.897)] and poor functional outcome [(OR=2.487 (CI: 0.771-8.699; p = 0.154)] after hemorrhagic stroke. No significant increase in stroke deaths was observed across higher SUA quintiles amongst hemorrhagic stroke patients (p = 0.326). No statistically significant correlation was observed between SUA level and NIHSS (r = 0.063, p = 0.353) and between SUA level and mRS (r = 0.030, p = 0.662) in hemorrhagic stroke.

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