3 research outputs found

    Neglect and aphasia in the acute phase as predictors of functional outcome 7 years after ischemic stroke

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    Background and purpose: Visuospatial inattention (VSI) and languageimpairment (LI) are often present early after stroke and associations with an unfavorable short-term functional outcome have been reported. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether a screening of VSI and LI as indicators of cortical symptoms early after stroke could predict long-term functional outcomes. Methods: A consecutive cohort of 375 patients with ischemic stroke was assessed for the occurrence of VSI at a median of 7 days after admission (interquartile range, 1ā€“5 days) using the Star Cancellation Test and for LI (within the ļ¬rst 7 days) with the language item in the Scandinavian StrokeScale. Seven years later, functional outcomes were assessed by the modiļ¬ed Rankin scale and Frenchay Activities Index in 235 survivors without recurrent stroke. Relationships between baseline predictors and functional outcome at 7 years were analyzed with bivariate correlations and multiple categorical regressions with optimal scaling. Results: The regression model signiļ¬cantly explained variance in the modiļ¬ed Rankin scale (R2= 0.435, P < 0.001) and identiļ¬ed VSI (P=0.001) and neurological deļ¬cits (P < 0.001; Scandinavian Stroke Scale score without the language item) as the signiļ¬cant independent predictors. The model for FrenchayActivities Index was also signiļ¬cant (R2= 0.269, P < 0.001) with VSI(P = 0.035) and neurological deļ¬cits (P < 0.001) as signiļ¬cant independent predictors. Conclusions: Visuospatial inattention at acute stroke has an independent impact on long-term functional outcomes. Early recognition may enable targeted rehabilitative interventions
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