Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Patient’s Activities before the Onset of Stroke and Localization of Intracerebral Hemorrhage in Black Africans

Serge Malenga Mpaka, Blaise Ngizulu Mazuka, Didier Ndabahweje Ndyanabo, Benjamin Longo-Mbenza, Michel Lelo Tshikwela

Abstract


Background: Some published studies on the patient’s activity before the stroke occurrence indicate that thereis an increased risk of the onset of acute stroke during these activities. In our community, these data are not yet assessed. The purpose of this pilot study was to examine whether intracerebral hemorrhage may be linked to patient’s physical activity before the onset and to carry out any relationship with location of the hemorrhage.

Methods: The patient’s activity before the onset of stroke and location of hemorrhage in 58 patients (40 men and 18 women, aged 39 to 81years) admitted with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage seen by CT in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, from 2012 to 2015, were recorded and analyzed using logistic regression models.

Results: In 31% of the case, the onset developed after emotional factors, in 24% in the lavatory, in 15% during housework and in 12% during sexual activity (X-squared = 8.319, p-value = 0.081). There was no significant difference between those activities and the site of intracerebral hemorrhage (p?0.05).

Conclusion: Most patients in this series seemed to be stricken by the hemorrhagic stroke during some physical activity. It is less certain that location of intracerebral hemorrhage was linked with these activities.


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.22158/rhs.v4n2p101

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Copyright (c) 2019 Serge Malenga Mpaka, Blaise Ngizulu Mazuka, Didier Ndabahweje Ndyanabo, Benjamin Longo-Mbenza, Michel Lelo Tshikwela

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