Abstract

Introduction: Associations between stroke subtype and post-stroke cognitive decline are unclear. We determined if post-stroke cognitive trajectories differed between 1) hemorrhagic vs. ischemic stroke and 2) ischemic stroke subtypes. Methods: We identified 1,150 eligible dementia-free individuals with incident stroke (93% ischemic, 7% hemorrhagic, 50% women, 31% Black, median age, 65) from 4 cohort studies from 1971-2019: Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, Cardiovascular Health Study, Framingham Offspring Study, and Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke. Of the ischemic strokes, 22% were small-vessel occlusion, 8% large artery atherosclerosis, 21% cardioembolic, and 49% cryptogenic/other determined etiology. Linear mixed-effects models were used to estimate longitudinal changes in cognition after incident stroke. Global cognition (primary outcome), executive function, and memory were harmonized across studies and standardized as T-scores (mean [SD], 50 [10]); a 1-point difference represents a 0.1-SD difference in cognition. Median (IQR) follow-up was 5.9 (3.2, 9.2) years. Results: Survivors of ischemic stroke had significant declines in global cognition, executive function, and memory (Table). For example, global cognition declined -0.35 points/year (95%CI, -0.43, -0.26); P <0.001. Initial post-stroke cognitive scores and post-stroke cognitive trajectories did not differ between hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke, except for lower initial post-stroke memory scores (adjusted difference, -1.39 points; 95% CI, -2.77, -0.01; P =0.049). Survivors of small-vessel occlusions had significant declines in global cognition, executive function, and memory (Table). Initial post-stroke cognitive scores and post-stroke cognitive trajectories did not differ by ischemic stroke subtype. Conclusions: Our results suggest that stroke survivors experience long-term post-stroke cognitive decline regardless of subtype.

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