The study explores stroke’s long-term impact by examining all-cause and cause-specific mortality.
The researchers compared baseline variables between participants who had stroke and nonstroke participants.
They found that alcohol intake is among five key factors for stroke.

Author

Enrique Gomez-Figueroa, José Luis Ruiz-Sandoval, Andrea Margarita De Alba-Sánchez, Omar Cárdenas-Sáenz, Carlos Zúñiga-Ramírez, Raúl Amavisca-Espinosa, Fátima Macías-Ortiz, Amado Jímenez-Ruiz

Citation

Gomez-Figueroa E, Ruiz-Sandoval JL, De Alba-Sánchez AM, Cárdenas-Sáenz O, Zúñiga-Ramírez C, Amavisca-Espinosa R, Macías-Ortiz F, Jímenez-Ruiz A. Contribution of Stroke to Long-Term All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality in Mexico City. Neurology. 2024 Sep 10;103(5):e209778. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000209778. Epub 2024 Aug 16. PMID: 39151103.


Source
Neurology Journals
Release date
16/08/2024

Contribution of Stroke to Long-Term All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality in Mexico City

Research article

Abstract

Background and Objectives

Stroke mortality is more common in low-income and middle-income nations such as Mexico. Prognosis data typically rely on short-term hospital follow-ups, revealing high mortality rates due to systemic complications and early recurrence.

The researchers aim to explore stroke’s long-term impact by examining all-cause and cause-specific mortality.

Methods

The study analyzed data from the Mexico City Prospective Study (1998–2004) with known mortality outcomes until December 2022.

The researchers compared baseline variables between participants who had stroke and nonstroke participants.

Cox proportional hazard regression assessed each variable’s contribution to overall mortality.

Subsequent analysis within the stroke subgroup aimed to identify unique risk factors of mortality, using Cox regression models adjusted for age, sex, and time since stroke.

Results

Among 145,537 eligible participants, 1,492 (1.0%) had a history of stroke.

Participants who had stroke were:

  • older (57.58 vs 50.16);
  • had lower mean weekly income ($108.24 vs $176.14);
  • had higher alcohol intake and smoking frequency; and
  • had more frequent co-morbidities such as hypertension (48.9 vs 19.3%), diabetes (23.4 vs 12.9%), and ischemic heart disease (5.4 vs 1.0%).

They had a significantly increased risk of death from any cause (hazard ratio [HR] 2.59).

Deceased participants with stroke were more likely to be male, with a higher prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, and abnormal waist-hip index. Stroke increased the risk of death from cardiac (HR 3.56), renal (HR 2.05), and pulmonary (HR 2.29) causes.

Discussion

This study confirms stroke’s association with higher mortality rates, especially from cardiac, renal, and pulmonary causes in Mexico. It underscores the elevated prevalence of cardiovascular comorbidities and adverse socioeconomic profiles among participants who had stroke and those who died with a history of stroke.


Source Website: Neurology