[Functional outcome in patients with ischemic stroke and COVID-19 in Lima, Peru]

[秘鲁利马缺血性卒中合并 COVID-19 患者的功能预后]

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 seems to induce ischemic stroke by several potential mechanisms including promoting hypercoagulability, and worse functional outcomes have been reported in patients with stroke and the infection with SARS-CoV-2. OBJECTIVE: Determine the association between functional outcome and COVID-19 in patients with stroke. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We performed a case control study comparing patients admitted to a neurological reference center in Peru with a diagnosis of stroke before (controls) and after (cases) the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. There were 31 cases diagnosed with COVID-19 and 62 controls without COVID-19. Bivariate analysis and conditional fixed-effects Poisson regression analysis were used to evaluate the association between the functional outcome of the stroke and COVID-19. RESULTS: Cases had higher baseline serum glucose (133.5, IQR: 117.5-174 versus 117, IQR: 101-130, p = 0.033) than controls, higher neutrophil counts (7.91, IQR: 5.93-9.57 versus 5.96, IQR: 4.41-7.79, p = 0.008), lower lymphocyte counts (1.48, IQR: 1.04-1.8 versus 1.83, IQR: 1.26-2.32, p = 0.025), higher neutrophil/lymphocyte ratios (5.44, IQR: 4.0-8.1 versus 3.29, IQR: 2.25-6.02, p = 0.011), higher NIH stroke scale/score (NIHSS) (14, IQR: 9-18 versus 7 IQR: 5-11, p = 0.000), and higher modified Rankin scores at discharge (4, IQR: 4-5 versus 2, IQR: 1-4), p = 0.001). Seven (21.88%) participants died in the group of cases versus 1 (1.56%) in the controls (p = 0.014). The odds ratio of having a bad functional outcome at discharge was 1.344 (CI: 1.079-4.039; p = 0.029), adjusted by NIHSS at admission. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that ischemic strokes associated with COVID-19 are more severe, have worse functional outcome and higher mortality than non-COVID-19 ischemic strokes.

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