15. Factors related to poor clinical outcomes in young patients with hypertension intracranial hemorrhagic stroke
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Abstract
Hypertension remains the leading cause of intracerebral hemorrhage in young people. We conducted a cross-sectional observational study from November 2020 to May 2022 on a group of young patients under 45 years of age diagnosed with hypertension intracerebral hemorrhage admitted to Bach Mai Stroke Center to evaluate treatment outcome and related factors. The study recruited 82 young patients with hypertension intracerebral hemorrhage, male accounted for 90.2%. The rate of achieving the good clinical outcome (mRS 0 - 2) was 39/82 (47%) patients, the poor clinical outcome (mRS 3 - 6) was 43/82 (53%). Factors associated with poor clinical outcomes, according to univariate binary regression analysis, were Glasgow (OR = 0.54; 95%CI: 0.39 - 0.75), NIHSS (OR = 1.23; 95%CI: 1.12 - 1.35), systolic blood pressure (OR = 1.19; 95%CI: 1.00 - 1.40) and hematoma volume (every 10ml increasing volume OR = 1.4; 95%CI: 1.16 - 1.71).
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Keywords
Hypertension intracerebral hemorrhage, young patients, the ability to recover
References
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