Stroke in the adult Qatari population (Q-stroke) a hospital-based retrospective cohort study

Yahia Imam(Hamad Medical Corporation), Saadat Kamran(Hamad Medical Corporation), Maher Saqqur(Hamad Medical Corporation), Faisal Ibrahim(Hamad Medical Corporation), Prem Chandra(Hamad Medical Corporation), Jon Perkins(Hamad Medical Corporation), Rayaz A. Malik(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Naveed Akhtar(Hamad Medical Corporation), Salman Al-Jerdi(Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), Dirk Deleu(Hamad Medical Corporation), Osama Elalamy(Hamad Medical Corporation), Yasir Osman(Hamad Medical Corporation), Gayane Malikyan(Hamad Medical Corporation), Hisham Elkhider(Hamad Medical Corporation), Suha Elmakki(Hamad Medical Corporation), Lubna Elsheikh(Hamad Medical Corporation), Noha Mhjob(Hamad Medical Corporation), Mohamed S. Abdelmoneim(Hamad Medical Corporation), Nima Alkhawad(Hamad Medical Corporation), Ahmed Own(Hamad Medical Corporation), Ashfaq Shuaib(University of Alberta)
PLoS ONE
September 21, 2020
Cited by 25Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Studies assessing the burden of stroke in Qataris are limited. We aim to study stroke in the Qatari population. METHODS: A retrospective review was undertaken of all Qatari adults presenting with stroke to Hamad Medical Corporation over a 5-year period. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize demographic and all other clinical characteristics of the patients. The primary outcome was the incidence of stroke in the Qatari patients. Comparison was made between the sexes. RESULTS: 862 patients were included, with 58.9% being male. The average incidence of stroke over the 5-year period was 92.04 per 100,000 adult Qatari population. The mean age of the cohort was 64.3±14.4 years, (range 19-105 years). The mean age of first ever cerebrovascular event was 63.2±14.5 years. The diagnosis was ischemic stroke in (73.7%), transient ischemic attack in (13.8%), intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in (11.6%), subarachnoid hemorrhage in (0.7%) and (0.2%) cerebral venous sinus thrombosis. Small vessel disease was the most common cause of ischemic stroke accounting for (46.5%), followed by large artery atherosclerosis (24.5%). Hypertension (82.7%) and diabetes (71.6%) were particularly prevalent in this cohort. Females were older (65.8±14.1 vs 63.4±14.5 years), had more hypertension and diabetes and more disability or death at 90 days (p<0.05) compared to Qatari males. CONCLUSION: Stroke occurs at a significantly lower age in Qataris compared to the western population. This study has uncovered sex differences that need to be studied further.


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