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Influence of Prior Nicotine and Alcohol Use on Functional Outcome in Patients after Intracerebral Hemorrhage.

Authors :
Sembill, Jochen A.
Sprügel, Maximilian I.
Gerner, Stefan T.
Beuscher, Vanessa D.
Giede-Jeppe, Antje
Stocker, Margarete
Hoelter, Philip
Lücking, Hannes
Kuramatsu, Joji B.
Huttner, Hagen B.
Source :
Journal of Stroke & Cerebrovascular Diseases; Apr2018, Vol. 27 Issue 4, p892-899, 8p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>The influence of prior nicotine or alcohol use (legal drug use [LDU]) on outcome measures after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is insufficiently established. We investigated drug-specific associations with (1) neuroradiologic and clinical parameters and (2) functional long-term outcome after ICH.<bold>Methods: </bold>This observational cohort study analyzed consecutive spontaneous patients with ICH (n = 554) from our prospective institutional registry over a 5-year study period (January 2010 to December 2014). We compared no-LDU patients with LDU patients, and patients using only nicotine, only alcohol, or both. To account for baseline imbalances, we reanalyzed cohorts after propensity score matching.<bold>Results: </bold>Prevalence of prior LDU was 197 of 554 (35.6%), comprising 94 of 554 (17.0%) with only nicotine use, 33 of 554 (6.0%) with only alcohol use, and 70 of 554 (12.6%) with alcohol and nicotine use. LDU patients were younger (65 [56-73] versus 75 [67-82], P <.01), less often female (n = 61 of 197 [31.0%] versus n = 188 of 357 [52.7%], P <.01), had more often prior myocardial infarction (n = 29 of 197 [14.7%] versus n = 24 of 357 [6.7%], P <.01), and in-hospital complications (sepsis or systemic inflammatory response syndrome: n = 95 of 197 [48.2%] versus n = 98 of 357 [27.5%], P <.01; pneumonia: n = 89 of 197 [45.2%] versus n = 110 of 357 [30.8%], P <.01). Except for an increased risk of pneumonia (odds ratio 2.22, confidence interval [1.04-4.75], P = .04) in patients using both nicotine and alcohol, we detected no significant differences upon reanalysis after propensity score matching of neuroradiologic or clinical parameters, complications, or long-term outcome between patients with and without LDU (mortality: n = 48 of 150 [32.0%] versus n = 45 of 150 [30.0%], P = .71; favorable outcome [modified Rankin Scale 0-3]: n = 56 of 150 [37.3%] versus n = 53 of 150 [35.3%], P = .72).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Prior nicotine use, alcohol use, and their combination were associated with significant differences in baseline characteristics. However, adjusting for unevenly balanced baseline parameters revealed no differences in functional long-term outcome after ICH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10523057
Volume :
27
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Stroke & Cerebrovascular Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128393124
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2017.10.029