| Literature DB >> 31644550 |
Claire Della Vecchia1,2, Marie Préau2,3, Camille Carpentier2, Marie Viprey1,4, Julie Haesebaert1,4, Anne Termoz1,4, Alexandra L Dima1, Anne-Marie Schott1,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As acute stroke services improve, more persons experience mild stroke and need to cope daily with hidden disabilities, which may be influenced by how they perceive stroke, cognitively and emotionally.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31644550 PMCID: PMC6808550 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The stroke common sense model of self-regulation adapted from Leventhal et al, 2016 [11].
Fig 2Semi-structured interview guide.
Participants characteristics.
| Respondent No. | Sex | Age (at stroke onset) | Time since stroke onset (months) | Marital status | Socio-professional category | Interview duration (minutes) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 68 | 7.9 | widowed | retired | 51 |
| 2 | M | 68 | 6.2 | married | retired | 32 |
| 3 | M | 68 | 8.1 | married | retired | 47 |
| 4 | M | 72 | 6.6 | widowed | retired | 75 |
| 5 | F | 87 | 6.8 | widowed | retired | 69 |
| 6 | M | 51 | 7.2 | in a relationship | active employment | 55 |
| 7 | M | 70 | 8.9 | married | retired | 45 |
| 8 | M | 82 | 8.9 | married | retired | 40 |
| 9 | M | 53 | 9.3 | married | active employment | 93 |
| 10 | F | 46 | 8.6 | single | active employment | 76 |
| 11 | M | 81 | 6.9 | married | retired | 34 |
| 12 | F | 64 | 6.5 | widowed | active employment | 54 |
| 13 | F | 66 | 6.6 | divorced | retired | 77 |
| 14 | M | 58 | 7.3 | divorced | active employment | 56 |
| 15 | M | 72 | 7.3 | married | retired | 56 |
| 16 | M | 66 | 7.9 | married | retired | 55 |
| 17 | M | 71 | 7.8 | married | retired | 35 |
| 18 | F | 40 | 7.0 | single | active employment | 37 |
| 19 | M | 73 | 6.9 | married | retired | 40 |
| 20 | M | 76 | 7.9 | married | retired | 45 |
| 21 | M | 49 | 7.2 | married | active employment | 50 |
| 22 | F | 89 | 8.3 | widowed | retired | 50 |
| 23 | M | 69 | 8.6 | married | retired | 62 |
| 24 | M | 72 | 8.3 | married | retired | 48 |
Clinical characteristics of study participants.
| Respondent No. | mRs (evaluated from researchers) | Impairments declared by participants | Admission to a rehabilitation center | Outpatient rehabilitation | Healthcare providers with whom participants had current interactions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Memory loss, visual disorders | No | None | GP, cardiologist | |
| 2 | Balance and motor disorders, fatigue, irritability | Yes | Physiotherapy | GP, cardiologist | |
| 2 | Motor disorders, urinary incontinence, fatigue, visual disorders | Yes | None | GP, urologist | |
| 1 | Pain, fatigue, balance and mood disorders | Yes | Physiotherapy | GP, cardiologist, neurologist | |
| 2 | Fatigue, balance and mood disorders, disorientation, memory loss | No | None | GP | |
| 0 | None | No | None | GP, cardiologist | |
| 0 | Fatigue, mood disorders, irritability | No | None | GP, cardiologist, neurologist | |
| 1 | None | No | None | GP, cardiologist, pneumologist | |
| 1 | Sensitivity disorders, fatigue | Yes | Physiotherapy | GP, cardiologist | |
| 2 | Fatigue, mood and concentration disorders | Yes | Physiotherapy, speech therapy | GP, neurologist, psychiatrist | |
| 2 | Distal sensitivity and mood disorders | No | None | GP, cardiologist | |
| 2 | Fatigue, visual and mood disorders | No | Physiotherapy | GP, ophthalmologist | |
| 2 | Visual, mood, concentration disorders, fatigue, memory loss | No | None | GP, psychiatrist, ophthalmologist | |
| 2 | Motor, balance, visual, mood disorders, fatigue | No | Physiotherapy | GP, neurologist | |
| 1 | Fatigue, mood disorders | Yes | Physiotherapy | GP, cardiologist, neurologist | |
| 2 | Concentration disorders, libido and sexual dysfunction, emotional lability, fatigue, irritability | No | Speech therapy | GP, cardiologist, neurologist | |
| 0 | Dyspraxia, fatigue | Yes | Physiotherapy | GP, endocrinologist | |
| 2 | Vertigo, fatigue, mood disorders | No | None | GP, neurologist | |
| 1 | None | No | None | GP, cardiologist, pneumologist | |
| 2 | Balance disorders | No | Physiotherapy | GP, neurologist | |
| 2 | Dysgraphia | No | Physiotherapy, speech therapy | GP, cardiologist | |
| 2 | Balance disorders, paresthesia | Yes | None | GP, neurologist | |
| 2 | Fatigue, balance disorders | No | None | GP | |
| 0 | Dysgraphia, fatigue | Yes | Physiotherapy, speech therapy | GP, neurologist |
1No more rehabilitation sessions at the time of the interview
Main findings and their link with implications for clinical practice and patient support interventions.
| Main findings | Implications for clinical practice and patient support interventions |
|---|---|
| | • Discuss symptoms/changes experienced during and after the acute stage and to what extent they could be linked to stroke or other factors |
| | Discuss beliefs survivors have on stroke causes and provide relevant information about risk factors |
| | • Discuss consequences from the survivors’ perspectives |
| | • Aware survivors of stroke and their relatives regarding stroke symptoms and the appropriate response to have in case of recurrence |
| | • Asking persons with stroke about their own expectations concerning the duration of their condition may help align their perceptions with rehabilitation goals |
| | Provide appropriate advice, resources, referral about the survivor’s specific emotional responses to stroke |
| | • Ask survivors’ satisfaction regarding their social support and propose solutions to enhance it (peer support group, stroke online forum…)Ask survivors’ satisfaction regarding their social support and propose solutions to enhance it (peer support group, stroke online forum…) |