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In-hospital dynamics of glucose, blood pressure and temperature predict outcome in patients with acute ischaemic stroke
Author(s) -
Skafida Anastasia,
Mitrakou Asimina,
Georgiopoulos Georgios,
Alevizaki Maria,
Spengos Konstantinos,
Takis Konstantinos,
Ntaios George,
Thomadakis Christos,
Vemmos Konstantinos
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
european stroke journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.446
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 2396-9881
pISSN - 2396-9873
DOI - 10.1177/2396987318765824
Subject(s) - ischaemic stroke , medicine , blood pressure , cardiology , acute stroke , stroke (engine) , outcome (game theory) , emergency medicine , ischemia , physics , tissue plasminogen activator , mathematics , mathematical economics , thermodynamics
We aimed to assess alterations in glucose, blood pressure and temperature in acute ischaemic stroke and investigate their association with early all-cause mortality and functional outcome.Patients and methods We studied all consecutive acute ischaemic stroke patients admitted in 2001–2010 to the Acute Stroke Unit, at Alexandra University Hospital, in Athens. Serial measurements were performed in the first seven days post-stroke and different parameters have been estimated: mean daily values, variability, subject-specific baseline levels and rate of change in serial measurements. Cox-proportional-hazards-model analysis and logistic-regression analysis were applied to investigate the association between these parameters and all-cause mortality and functional outcome after adjustment for known confounders of stroke outcome.Results In 1271 patients (mean age 72.3 ± 11.2 years), after adjusting for confounders, baseline glucose levels (HR: 1.005, 95%CI: 1.001–1.01; p =  0.017), variability of systolic BP (SBP) as estimated by standard deviation (HR: 1.028, 95%CI: 1.01–1.048; p =  0.005), the baseline temperature (HR: 2.758, 95%CI: 2.067–3.68; p <  0.001) and the rate of temperature change (HR: 1.841, 95%CI: 1.616–2.908; p <  0.001) were independently associated with all-cause mortality within three months. Poor functional outcome was associated with subject-specific baseline values of temperature (OR: 1.743; 95%CI: 1.076–2.825; p =  0.024), the rate of SBP (OR: 1.159; 95% CI: 1.047–1.280; p =  0.004) and temperature change (OR: 1.402; 95% CI: 1.061–1.853; p =  0.018).Discussion The main strength of our study is that we analysed simultaneously three parameters and we used four different variables for each parameter of interest.Conclusion Baseline glucose levels, variability of SBP and baseline temperature and its rate of change are independent predictors of all-cause mortality. Baseline values of temperature and the rate of changes in SBP and temperature are independent predictors of poor functional outcome.

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