PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Acute stress symptoms 1-2 weeks after stroke predict the subsequent development of post-traumatic stress symptoms: A prospective cohort study.

  • David Feely,
  • Brian Slattery,
  • Thomas Walsh,
  • Trish Galvin,
  • Kate Donlon,
  • Michelle Hanlon,
  • Darina Gormley,
  • Gwen-Marie Brown,
  • Sarah Quinn,
  • Stephanie Robinson,
  • Conor Judge,
  • Martin O'Donnell,
  • Kiran Sarma,
  • Brian E McGuire

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0286220
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 10
p. e0286220

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveTo date no research has examined the potential influence of acute stress symptoms (ASD) on subsequent development of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in stroke survivors. Our objective was to examine whether acute stress symptoms measured 1-2 weeks post-stroke predicted the presence of post-traumatic stress symptoms measured 6-12 weeks later.DesignProspective within-groups study.MethodsFifty four participants who completed a measure of acute stress disorder at 1-2 weeks following stroke (time 1) and 31 of these participants completed a measure of posttraumatic stress disorder 6-12 weeks later (time 2). Participants also completed measures of stroke severity, functional impairment, cognitive impairment, depression, anxiety, pre-morbid intelligence and pain across both time points.ResultsSome 22% met the criteria for ASD at baseline and of those, 62.5% went on to meet the criteria for PTSD at follow-up. Meanwhile two of the seven participants (28.6%) who met the criteria for PTSD at Time 2, did not meet the ASD criteria at Time 1 (so that PTSD developed subsequently). A hierarchical multiple regression analysis indicated that the presence of acute stress symptoms at baseline was predictive of post-traumatic stress symptoms at follow-up (R2 = .26, p ConclusionsThe results highlight the importance of early assessment and identification of acute stress symptoms in stroke survivors as a risk factor for subsequent PTSD. Both ASD and PTSD were prevalent and the presence of both disorders should be assessed.