Prevalence of Stroke

Author:

Nicoletti A.1,Sofia V.1,Giuffrida S.1,Bartoloni A.1,Bartalesi F.1,Bartolo M. L. Lo1,Fermo S. Lo1,Cocuzza V.1,Gamboa H.1,Salazar E.1,Reggio A.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Institute of Neurological Science (A.N., V.S., S.G., M.L.L.B., S.L.F., A.R.), University of Catania, and the Institute of Infectious Diseases (A.B., F.B.), University of Florence, Florence, Italy; and Health District of the Cordillera Province (H.G., E.S.), Camiri, Bolivia.

Abstract

Background and Purpose —We carried out a door-to-door survey in rural areas of the Cordillera Province, Santa Cruz Department, Bolivia. A cluster sample of 10 124 inhabitants was selected, and 9955 subjects were screened. The aim was to determine the prevalence of the most common neurological diseases (epilepsy, stroke, parkinsonism, and peripheral neuropathy) in this population. Methods —We used a modified version of the World Health Organization screening instrument. On screening we found that 1130 subjects tested positive, and 1027 underwent a complete neurological examination. According to the World Health Organization guidelines, we defined stroke as “rapidly developing clinical signs of focal (or global) disturbance of cerebral functions, lasting more than 24 hours or leading to death, with no apparent cause other than that of vascular origin.” We considered only first stroke and excluded a possible stroke. Results —We found 16 subjects (cases) who had experienced 1 complete stroke on prevalent day (November 1, 1994). The crude prevalence of stroke was 174/100 000 (322/100 000 age-adjusted to the world standard population) and 663/100 000 in subjects aged ≥35 years. Prevalence was >2-fold higher in men than in women (247/100 000 and 99/100 000, respectively) and increased rapidly with age. Seven cases were hospitalized and received specific treatment. Conclusions —Our crude prevalence is lower compared with rates from developed countries, probably because of a high case fatality rate. Our findings are comparable with those reported from other surveys carried out in rural developing countries.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

Reference19 articles.

1. Poungvarin N. Stroke in developing world. Lancet . 1998;352(suppl III):III-19–III-22.

2. World Health Organization Research Protocol for Measuring the Prevalence of Neurological Disorders in Developing Countries: Neuroscience Programme. Geneva Switzerland: World Health Organization; 1981.

3. Prevalence of epilepsy in rural Bolivia: A door-to-door survey

4. Door-to-Door Prevalence Survey of Neurological Diseases in a Sicilian Population

5. A Neuroepidemiological Survey in Rural Bolivia: Background and Methods

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