Objective: To evaluate the impact of urinary tract and pulmonary infection on mortality after cerebral hemorrhage. Method: We conducted at the University Hospital of Brazzaville, a cross-sectional study from January t...Objective: To evaluate the impact of urinary tract and pulmonary infection on mortality after cerebral hemorrhage. Method: We conducted at the University Hospital of Brazzaville, a cross-sectional study from January to August2012 inthe emergency department, neurology and intensive care unit. It included patients admitted for cerebral hemorrhage confirmed by CT-scan. A statistical analysis by logistic regression was carried out to evaluate the correlation between infection and death. Result: Among total of 261 patients for stroke, 82 admitted for cerebral hemorrhage (31.4%). The mean age was 55 ± 11 years (range 26 to 83 years). The sex ratio men/women was 1.7. Hypertension was the most important risk factor to 80.5%. The average intake in neurology time was 28 ± 13 hours. The average time for completion of the CT-scan was 2.4 ± 2 days. Thirty-eight (46.3%) patients had a fever linked to an infectious cause from the third day of hospitalization. The most frequent infectious complications were sepsis (n = 16%;42%), pulmonary infection (n = 14%;37%) and urinary tract infection (n = 8%;21%). Specific mortality of infection was 31.7% (n = 26). The multivariate analysis showed a positive correlation between the occurrence of infection and mortality (p = 0.002), specifically between sepsis and mortality (p = 0.0004), and an association between the time of admission late in neurology and the occurrence of infectious complications (p = 0.0001). Conclusion: Infection is one of the dreaded complications of cerebral hemorrhage. It is often associated with delayed care in specialized areas, and is thereby a preventable cause of death.展开更多
文摘Objective: To evaluate the impact of urinary tract and pulmonary infection on mortality after cerebral hemorrhage. Method: We conducted at the University Hospital of Brazzaville, a cross-sectional study from January to August2012 inthe emergency department, neurology and intensive care unit. It included patients admitted for cerebral hemorrhage confirmed by CT-scan. A statistical analysis by logistic regression was carried out to evaluate the correlation between infection and death. Result: Among total of 261 patients for stroke, 82 admitted for cerebral hemorrhage (31.4%). The mean age was 55 ± 11 years (range 26 to 83 years). The sex ratio men/women was 1.7. Hypertension was the most important risk factor to 80.5%. The average intake in neurology time was 28 ± 13 hours. The average time for completion of the CT-scan was 2.4 ± 2 days. Thirty-eight (46.3%) patients had a fever linked to an infectious cause from the third day of hospitalization. The most frequent infectious complications were sepsis (n = 16%;42%), pulmonary infection (n = 14%;37%) and urinary tract infection (n = 8%;21%). Specific mortality of infection was 31.7% (n = 26). The multivariate analysis showed a positive correlation between the occurrence of infection and mortality (p = 0.002), specifically between sepsis and mortality (p = 0.0004), and an association between the time of admission late in neurology and the occurrence of infectious complications (p = 0.0001). Conclusion: Infection is one of the dreaded complications of cerebral hemorrhage. It is often associated with delayed care in specialized areas, and is thereby a preventable cause of death.