BMC Geriatrics (Oct 2024)

What is the impact of acute endocrine and metabolic alterations on long-term ischemic stroke prognosis: a prospective study

  • Chunyang Pang,
  • Yufei Chen,
  • Yinuo Chen,
  • Er lin,
  • Xinnan Pan,
  • Yiting Xu,
  • Huan Yu,
  • Wanli Zhang,
  • Binbin Deng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-024-05453-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Post-stroke stress can trigger instant survival but its influence on long-term ischemic stroke outcomes remains controversial. Thus, we sought to explore the associations of acute post-stroke stress evidenced by endocrine and metabolic changes, with long-term ischemic stroke outcomes. Methods Admissions for acute ischemic stroke within seven days of onset were prospectively recruited to determine acute endocrine and metabolic variations measured by thyroid parameters and the stress hyperglycemia ratio (SHR). Long-term ischemic stroke prognoses were followed up for one year, with the primary outcome being a modified Rankin Scale score of 3 to 6. Results A total of 887 patients were enrolled, of which 535 reached the final one-year followed up at a poor prognosis rate of 29.3%. Patients with poor outcomes were observed to have lower levels of free triiodothyronine (fT3) and higher levels of SHR on admission. Medium values (fT3, 4.4 mmol/L; SHR, 8 nmol/L) were used to divide patients into four gradient stress degrees. Larger acute endocrine and metabolic variations (fT3 < 4.4 mmol/L and SHR ≥ 8 nmol/L) were independently associated with a poor one-year prognosis (adjusted OR = 4.231, P = 0.001). Conclusions High degrees of acute post-stroke stress may aggravate long-term ischemic stroke prognosis and timely stress-reduced interventions may help promote post-stroke living quality is equally important as survival.

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