Relationship between NIH stroke symptoms and post-traumatic stress disorder in patients evaluated for transient ischemic attack/stroke - 11/05/21
, Lilly Derby b, Gaspar J. Cruz b, Alison Trainor b, Donald Edmondson b, Talea Cornelius bAbstract |
Objective |
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can develop after a life-threatening medical event. According to the enduring somatic treat (EST) model, internal somatic cues (e.g., rapid heart rate) may contribute to symptoms of stroke/TIA-induced PTSD. To address this possibility, the present study tested the association of stroke-induced disability with PTSD symptoms in patients treated for stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA).
Method |
Participants (n = 300) were drawn from an observational cohort study examining PTSD symptoms in patients admitted to the NewYork Presbyterian Hospital between 2015 and 2017 for a stroke/TIA. Patients self-reported acute stress symptoms in-person approximately 3 days post-stroke/TIA and PTSD symptoms via telephone one month later. Severity of stroke symptoms (i.e., stroke disability) was evaluated using the NIH Stroke Scale prior to hospital discharge.
Results |
Stroke disability had a significant, positive association with acute stress symptoms early post-stroke/TIA, B = 0.46, se = 0.15, p = .002, and with PTSD symptoms one month later, B = 0.56, se = 0.19, p = .003.
Conclusions |
Stroke disability is positively associated with both acute distress and PTSD symptoms one month later following a stroke/TIA, supporting the hypothesis that internal somatic symptoms contribute to the development stroke/TIA-induced PTSD symptoms.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Post-traumatic stress disorder, ED threat perceptions, Stroke, Disability, Enduring somatic threat
Plan
Vol 70
P. 98-102 - mai 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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