Factors Influencing Stroke Survivors’ Quality of Life During Subacute Recovery
Emory University · The Centers · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Two hundred twenty-nine participants 3 to 9 months poststroke were enrolled in a national multisite clinical trial (Extremity Constraint-Induced Therapy Evaluation). HRQOL was assessed using the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS), Version 3.0. The Wolf Motor Function Test documented functional recovery of the hemiplegic upper extremity. Multiple analysis of variance and regression models examined the influence of demographic and clinical variables across SIS domains.
Age, gender, education level, stroke type, concordance (paretic arm=dominant hand), upper extremity motor function (Wolf Motor Function Test), and comorbidities were associated across SIS domains. Poorer HRQOL in the physical domain was associated with age, nonwhite race, more comorbidities, and reduced upper-extremity function. Stroke survivors with more comorbidities reported poorer HRQOL in the area of memory and thinking, and those with an ischemic stroke and concordance reported poorer communication.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 8.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
5- DSDeborah S. Nichols‐LarsenCorresponding
Emory University, The Centers, The Ohio State University
- PCPatricia C. Clark
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Emory University, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The Centers
- AZAngelique Zeringue
Emory University, The Centers, The Ohio State University
- AIArlene I. Greenspan
Emory University, The Centers, The Ohio State University
- SBSarah Blanton
Emory University, The Centers, The Ohio State University
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Stroke (engine)
- Stroke recovery
- Quality of life (healthcare)
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
- Physical therapy
- Rehabilitation
- Nursing
- No poverty