Medical complications during inpatient rehabilitation in patients with ischemic stroke in a tertiary care hospital in Nepal
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3126/jkmc.v8i3.29724Keywords:
Complications, GCS, NIHSS, PneumoniaAbstract
Background: Complications are common in patients with ischemic stroke and hinder successful rehabilitation. Timely identification and management of complications are key factors in the management of patients with ischemic stroke.
Objectives: The aim of this study is to find the occurrence of different types of complications in patients admitted with the diagnosis of ischemic stroke and to find the risk factors associated with the occurrence of complications.
Methodology: The study is a cross sectional descriptive study. A total of 96 patients with ischemic stroke admitted to the Department of Neurology of Kathmandu Medical College Teaching Hospital over a period of six months (July 2018 to December 2018) were recruited. Data was recorded according to a designed proforma and analysed using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 20.
Results: The age group ranged from 25 to 91 years with the mean age of 64.36 years and 50 (52.1%)patients were male. A total of 62 (64.6%) patients developed at least one complication during hospital stay. Pneumonia and urinary tract infection were the most common complications occurring in 22(22.9%) patients. The occurrence of complications was positively correlated with National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and Glasgow Coma Scale.
Conclusion: Pneumonia and urinary tract infection were the most common complications in our study and were similar to those quoted in the western literature. Severity of stroke had positive correlations with occurrence of complications.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright © Journal of Kathmandu Medical College
The ideas and opinions expressed by authors or articles summarized, quoted, or published in full text in this journal represent only the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of Journal of Kathmandu Medical College or the institute with which the author(s) is/are affiliated, unless so specified.
Authors convey all copyright ownership, including any and all rights incidental thereto, exclusively to JKMC, in the event that such work is published by JKMC. JKMC shall own the work, including 1) copyright; 2) the right to grant permission to republish the article in whole or in part, with or without fee; 3) the right to produce preprints or reprints and translate into languages other than English for sale or free distribution; and 4) the right to republish the work in a collection of articles in any other mechanical or electronic format.