Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia

Background: Stroke is becoming an increasingly serious public health issue in Ethiopia and the paucity of data specific to the Ethiopian setting is limiting the formulation of an appropriate response. Objective: This study aimed to describe types, risk factors, management patterns, and outcomes amon...

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Main Authors: Sennay A. Gebremariam, Hannah S. Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-06-01
Series:eNeurologicalSci
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405650216300107
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spelling doaj-e20595d06ad84ba2890df6c5d8625e9e2020-11-25T01:57:11ZengElseviereNeurologicalSci2405-65022016-06-013C414710.1016/j.ensci.2016.02.010Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern EthiopiaSennay A. Gebremariam0Hannah S. Yang1Department of Internal Medicine, Mekelle University, College of Health Sciences, PO Box 1871, Mekelle, Tigray, EthiopiaDepartment of Public Health, Mekelle University, College of Health Sciences, PO Box 1871, Mekelle, Tigray, EthiopiaBackground: Stroke is becoming an increasingly serious public health issue in Ethiopia and the paucity of data specific to the Ethiopian setting is limiting the formulation of an appropriate response. Objective: This study aimed to describe types, risk factors, management patterns, and outcomes among stroke patients treated at a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia from 2012 to 2014. Design: Medical record review with a standardized abstraction tool was used to obtain all data for this retrospective case study. Data was entered in EpiInfo Version 7 and analyzed using STATA12. Descriptive statistics were used to explore differences among stroke subtypes and compare with other sub-Saharan African countries. Results: Among 142 stroke patients (mean age 62.8 ± 15.6 years, 54.2% male), ischemic stroke was the most frequent subtype (55.6%) followed by intracerebral hemorrhage (32.4%) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (5.6%). 38.0% of patients had pre-existing hypertension and 4.9% had pre-existing diabetes, and most were not on any treatment. 66.2% of patients were hypertensive at hospital arrival and nearly all presented with focal neurological deficit. Less than 10% arrived at the hospital within 3 h of stroke; nearly half (47.9%) were delayed over 24 h. 76.1% received CT Scan. We observed 12.0% in-hospital mortality. Conclusions: Ischemic stroke was the predominant form of stroke, although to a lesser degree than in studies from developed countries. Under-diagnosing of hypertension and other risk factors and delayed presentation at the hospital are the major challenges to address.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405650216300107Cerebrovascular accidentEthiopiaStrokeEpidemiologyHospitalMedical record review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sennay A. Gebremariam
Hannah S. Yang
spellingShingle Sennay A. Gebremariam
Hannah S. Yang
Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia
eNeurologicalSci
Cerebrovascular accident
Ethiopia
Stroke
Epidemiology
Hospital
Medical record review
author_facet Sennay A. Gebremariam
Hannah S. Yang
author_sort Sennay A. Gebremariam
title Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia
title_short Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia
title_full Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia
title_sort types, risk profiles, and outcomes of stroke patients in a tertiary teaching hospital in northern ethiopia
publisher Elsevier
series eNeurologicalSci
issn 2405-6502
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Background: Stroke is becoming an increasingly serious public health issue in Ethiopia and the paucity of data specific to the Ethiopian setting is limiting the formulation of an appropriate response. Objective: This study aimed to describe types, risk factors, management patterns, and outcomes among stroke patients treated at a tertiary teaching hospital in northern Ethiopia from 2012 to 2014. Design: Medical record review with a standardized abstraction tool was used to obtain all data for this retrospective case study. Data was entered in EpiInfo Version 7 and analyzed using STATA12. Descriptive statistics were used to explore differences among stroke subtypes and compare with other sub-Saharan African countries. Results: Among 142 stroke patients (mean age 62.8 ± 15.6 years, 54.2% male), ischemic stroke was the most frequent subtype (55.6%) followed by intracerebral hemorrhage (32.4%) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (5.6%). 38.0% of patients had pre-existing hypertension and 4.9% had pre-existing diabetes, and most were not on any treatment. 66.2% of patients were hypertensive at hospital arrival and nearly all presented with focal neurological deficit. Less than 10% arrived at the hospital within 3 h of stroke; nearly half (47.9%) were delayed over 24 h. 76.1% received CT Scan. We observed 12.0% in-hospital mortality. Conclusions: Ischemic stroke was the predominant form of stroke, although to a lesser degree than in studies from developed countries. Under-diagnosing of hypertension and other risk factors and delayed presentation at the hospital are the major challenges to address.
topic Cerebrovascular accident
Ethiopia
Stroke
Epidemiology
Hospital
Medical record review
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405650216300107
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