Diabetes mellitus and obesity among South Asians with ischemic stroke across three countries

Background: Diabetes mellitus and central obesity are more common among South Asian populations than among White British people. This study explores the differences in diabetes and obesity in South Asians with stroke living in the United Kingdom, India, and Qatar compared with White British stroke p...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of stroke 2024-02, Vol.19 (2), p.235-243
Hauptverfasser: Ken-Dror, Gie, Ajami, Intisar, Han, Thang S, Aurelius, Taylor, Maheshwari, Ankita, Hail, Hassan Al, Deleu, Dirk, Sharma, Sapna D, Amlani, Sageet, Gunathilagan, Gunaratnam, Cohen, David L, Rajkumar, Chakravarthi, Maguire, Stuart, Ispoglou, Sissi, Balogun, Ibrahim, Parry, Anthea, Sekaran, Lakshmanan, Syed, Hafiz, Lawrence, Enas, Singh, Ravneeta, Hassan, Ahamad, Wharton, Chris, Javaid, Khalid, Goorah, Neetish, Carr, Peter, Abdus Sami, Eman, Ali, Musab, Hussein, Hassan Al, Osman Abuzaid, Hassan, Sharif, Khalid, Ram Sharma, Shri, Sylaja, PN, Yousef Khan, Fahmi, Prasad, Kameshwar, Sharma, Pankaj
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: Diabetes mellitus and central obesity are more common among South Asian populations than among White British people. This study explores the differences in diabetes and obesity in South Asians with stroke living in the United Kingdom, India, and Qatar compared with White British stroke patients. Methods: The study included the UK, Indian, and Qatari arms of the ongoing large Bio-Repository of DNA in Stroke (BRAINS) international prospective hospital-based study for South Asian stroke. BRAINS includes 4580 South Asian and White British recruits from UK, Indian, and Qatar sites with first-ever ischemic stroke. Results: The study population comprises 1751 White British (WB) UK residents, 1165 British South Asians (BSA), 1096 South Asians in India (ISA), and 568 South Asians in Qatar (QSA). ISA, BSA, and QSA South Asians suffered from higher prevalence of diabetes compared with WB by 14.5% (ISA: 95% confidence interval (CI) = 18.6–33.0, p 
ISSN:1747-4930
1747-4949
1747-4949
DOI:10.1177/17474930231203149