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Journal Article

Differential Impact of Index Stroke on Dementia Risk in African-Americans Compared to Whites

Objective To compare whites and African-Americans in terms of dementia risk following index stroke. Results Age at index stroke was significantly different between the 2 groups, with African-Americans being younger on average (70.0 [SD 12.5] in whites versus 64.5 [SD 14.1] in African-Americans, P < .0001). Adjusted hazard ratios revealed that African-American race increased risk for all 5 categories of dementia following incident stroke, ranging from 1.37 for AD to 1.95 for vascular dementia. Age, female sex, and intervening stroke likewise increased risk for dementia. Conclusions African-Americans are at higher risk for dementia than whites within 5 years of ischemic stroke, regardless of dementia subtype. Incident strokes may have a greater likelihood of precipitating dementia in African-Americans due to higher prevalence of nonstroke cerebrovascular disease or other metabolic or vascular factors that contribute to cognitive impairment.

Author(s)
D. Clark
A. Boan
C. Sims-Robinson
R. Adams
E. Amella
A. Benitez
D. Lackland
B. Ovbiagele
Journal Name
Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases
Publication Date
2018
DOI
10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2018.05.048