LO62: Systolic blood pressure is a strong predictive marker for TIA and mild stroke in younger patients

Introduction: Age and systolic blood pressure (SBP) are important predictors of Acute Cerebrovascular Syndrome (ACVS). Yet, the effect of SBP is confounded by age, making its independent contribution to ACVS risk difficult to quantify. Here we use logistic regression to explore the role of SBP in yo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of emergency medicine 2017-05, Vol.19 (S1), p.S49-S49
Hauptverfasser: Sedgwick, C., Bibok, M., Croteau, N.S., Lesperance, M.L., Balshaw, R., Votova, K., Blackwood, K., Coutts, S.D., Penn, A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction: Age and systolic blood pressure (SBP) are important predictors of Acute Cerebrovascular Syndrome (ACVS). Yet, the effect of SBP is confounded by age, making its independent contribution to ACVS risk difficult to quantify. Here we use logistic regression to explore the role of SBP in younger and older ED patients. Methods: Data comprised 1019 ED patients (ACVS 70%, 30% non-ACVS) enrolled during a 28-month period of an ongoing prospective, observational, multi-site stroke biomarker study (SpecTRA). We used logistic regression to examine the effects of age, sex, and the age:SBP interaction as predictive markers of the diagnosis of ACVS. Results: Participants (53% male) ranged in age from 18 to 97 years (Q1=58, median=70, Q3=80). SBP ranged from 84 to 248 mmHg (Q1=137, median=154, Q3=174). In our initial regression model, age, sex, SBP and the age:SBP interaction were all significant (p
ISSN:1481-8035
1481-8043
DOI:10.1017/cem.2017.124