Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8667430 | Journal of the American Society of Hypertension | 2018 | 37 Pages |
Abstract
It is not known whether combination of hypertension and high homocysteine (HHcy) impacts on stroke-related neurological severity. Our aim was to determine whether there is an interaction of hypertension and HHcy on neurological severity in first-ever ischemic stroke patients. We analyzed neurological severity among 189 consecutive first-ever ischemic stroke patients with or without hypertension or HHcy. Hypertension (odds ratio [OR]: 8.086, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.596-18.181, PÂ <Â .001) and total homocysteine (OR: 1.403, 95% CI: 1.247-1.579, PÂ <Â .001) were independently associated with neurological severity. In receiver-operating characteristic analysis, total homocysteine was a significant predictor of neurological severity (area under curve: 0.794; PÂ <Â .001). A multiplicative interaction of hypertension and HHcy on more severe neurological severity was revealed by binary logistic regression (OR: 13.154, 95% CI: 5.293-32.691, PÂ <Â .001). Analysis further identified a more than multiplicative interaction of hypertension and HHcy on neurological severity compared with patients without each condition (OR: 50.600, 95% CI: 14.775-173.285, PÂ <Â .001). Interaction effect measured on an additive scale showed that 76.4% patients with moderate/severe neurological severity were attributed to interaction of hypertension and HHcy. Significant interaction of hypertension and HHcy on neurological severity was found on multiplicative and additive scale in first-ever Chinese ischemic stroke patients.
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Authors
Ying-Li BSc, Rui BSc, Yi-Fei MD, PhD, Lei BSc, Xi-Xin BSc, Peng BSc, Jian BSc, Ping MD, PhD, Xiao-Shu MD, PhD,