Stroke hospitalisations rise among younger adults, but deaths fall

By Published On: 20 May 2022

Stroke hospitalisations for younger adults – along with the cardiovascular risk factors associated with them – have risen since 2007, preliminary new research shows.

But the chances of people under age 45 dying from a stroke in the hospital have dropped.

The increase in hospitalisations was higher for women and for white and Hispanic adults, according to the findings presented recently at the American Heart Association’s Quality of Care and Outcomes Research Scientific Sessions in Reston, Virginia.

The work is considered preliminary until the full findings are published in a peer-reviewed journal.

“The findings are both good and bad. Overall, it shows more young adults are seeking care and have more stroke awareness than 10 years ago,” said the study’s senior researcher Dr Chintan Rupareliya.

The “persistent increase in co-morbidities is alarming”, he said.

Dr Rupareliy is a senior neurology resident in the department of neurology at the University of Kentucky Medical Center in Lexington and upcoming stroke fellow at UT Southwestern in Dallas.

Stroke in young adults is much less common than it is in older adults, with only 10 to 15 per cent of all strokes occurring in people 18 to 50 years old.

Prior research has documented a rise in strokes among younger adults as well as in traditional stroke risk factors more typically seen in older adults, such as high blood pressure and cholesterol levels, diabetes, tobacco use and obesity.

Previous studies suggest young women face a higher stroke risk than young men, which may be partially due to the increased risks associated with birth control pills and pregnancy.

Combining oestrogen-containing contraceptives with additional risk factors, such as smoking, high blood pressure and migraine with aura, increases a woman’s stroke risk.

If a woman takes oestrogen, smokes and has migraine with aura, she faces a ninefold higher stroke risk compared to women without those risk factors, according to a 2020 article in the journal Stroke.

In the new study, researchers compared hospitalisation records for two groups of adults, ages 18 to 44, in the National Inpatient Sample.

They compared data for more than 10 million hospital stays in 2007 to about 8.5 million stays in 2017 to see how stroke hospitalisation, risk factors and mortality rates had changed among younger adults.

Overall, the rate of stroke hospitalisations among younger adults was low, but it increased by nearly 50 per cent from 2007 to 2017. The rise was especially high among women and for white and Hispanic adults.

Stroke hospitalisations rose 78 per cent for women compared to 58 per cent for men.

They climbed 77 per cent for white adults and 70 per cent for Hispanic adults, while increasing 56 per cent for Black adults. The increase was smallest – 29 per cent – for Asian and Pacific Islander adults.

Traditional stroke risk factors and related medical conditions also rose significantly over the decade.

Obesity more than doubled, from 8.6 to 18.5 per cent. The presence of high blood pressure and cholesterol levels, smoking and depression also rose, as did related illnesses such as heart failure and irregular heart rhythms.

But the odds of dying in the hospital after a stroke fell by 16 per cent between 2007 and 2017.

Although the study did not examine why stroke mortality rates fell, improvements in stroke treatments over the past decade probably are responsible, along with greater awareness of stroke symptoms and the need to immediately seek care, Rupareliya said.

“Time is brain when a stroke is occurring,” he said.

Stroke symptoms include sudden numbness or weakness in the face, arms or legs, especially on one side of the body; sudden confusion, trouble speaking or difficulty understanding others; vision problems in one or both eyes; dizziness, trouble walking or lack of balance; and a sudden, severe headache.

Women may be becoming increasingly aware of the stroke risk factors they face and may be better at recognising symptoms when they occur, said Dr Shlee Song, a neurologist and co-director of the Comprehensive Stroke Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Song, who was not involved in the new research, said further analysis by race and gender, such as determining whether women have different types of stroke than men, would be helpful.

“Then you can target the risk factor profiles that contribute to that disease process. Different subgroups may need more targeted therapies.”

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