1. Mental status and health-related quality of life in an elderly population 15 years after limited cerebral ischaemia.
- Author
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van Wijk, I., Gorter, J. W., Lindeman, E., Kappelle, L. J., van Gijn, J., Koudstaal, P. J., and Algra, A.
- Subjects
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CEREBRAL ischemia , *CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *MENTAL health , *COMORBIDITY , *QUALITY of life , *OLDER people - Abstract
Stroke has a major impact on survivors. Our study was designed to describe the mental status and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in long-term survivors of TIA or minor ischaemic stroke (MIS) and evaluate associations of mental and physical factors with HR-QoL. A random sample of the 10-year survivors of the Dutch TIA Trial (DTT) and the dutch participants of the European Atrial Fibrillation Trial (EAFT) were interviewed by postal questionnaire (n = 468) and at home (n = 198). Demographic data, mental health status (depression (CES-D), cognition (CAMCOG)), and health perception (SF-36 and Euroqol) were measured. 198 long-term survivors were included; mean age was 72.5 (SD 8.7 years), 22% was depressed (CES-D ≥ 16) and 15% had cognitive dysfunction (CAMCOG < 80). The overall HR-QoL did not differ much from the norm population. Physical disability, occurrence of a major stroke and comorbidity of locomotion or the heart were independently associated with a low health perception. Despite varying amounts of disability, the majority of long-term survivors of a TIA or MIS rated their quality of life as rather good. Physical factors, rather than mental status were independently related to a decrease in perceived health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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