Abstract

BackgroundDynamic change of heart rate in the acute phase and clinical outcomes after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) remains unknown. We aimed to investigate the associations of heart rate trajectories and variability with functional outcome and mortality in patients with acute ICH.MethodsThis prospective study was conducted among 332 patients with acute ICH. Latent mixture modeling was used to identify heart rate trajectories during the first 72 h of hospitalization after ICH onset. Mean and coefficient of variation of heart rate measurements were calculated. The study outcomes included unfavorable functional outcome, ordinal shift of modified Rankin Scale score, and all-cause mortality.ResultsWe identified 3 distinct heart rate trajectory patterns (persistent-high, moderate-stable, and low-stable). During 3-month follow-up, 103 (31.0%) patients had unfavorable functional outcome and 46 (13.9%) patients died. In multivariable-adjusted model, compared with patients in low-stable trajectory, patients in persistent-high trajectory had the highest odds of poor functional outcome (odds ratio 15.06, 95% CI 3.67–61.78). Higher mean and coefficient of variation of heart rate were also associated with increased risk of unfavorable functional outcome (P trend < 0.05), and the corresponding odds ratios (95% CI) comparing two extreme tertiles were 4.69 (2.04–10.75) and 2.43 (1.09–5.39), respectively. Likewise, similar prognostic effects of heart rate dynamic changes on high modified Rankin Scale score and all-cause mortality were observed.ConclusionsPersistently high heart rate and higher variability in the acute phase were associated with increased risk of unfavorable functional outcome in patients with acute ICH.

Highlights

  • Dynamic change of heart rate in the acute phase and clinical outcomes after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) remains unknown

  • We found that higher mean and coefficient of variation (CV) of heart rate during the acute phase were independently associated with increased risk 3-month unfavorable functional outcome after ICH

  • The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study indicated that time-updated heart rate and temporal change in heart rate over a median of 3 years were associated with mortality and nonfatal outcomes of incident heart failure, myocardial infarction, and stroke [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Dynamic change of heart rate in the acute phase and clinical outcomes after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) remains unknown. We aimed to investigate the associations of heart rate trajectories and variability with functional outcome and mortality in patients with acute ICH. It is extremely important to identify and manage risk factors associated with clinical outcomes after ICH. Heart rate is an accessible and useful clinical indicator of autonomic balance. Autonomic dysfunction or elevated heart rate is commonly observed after acute stroke and was suggested to be associated with adverse clinical outcomes in patients with acute ischemic stroke [10,11,12,13,14]. Evidence on the associations between heart rate and clinical outcomes in acute ICH patients is rare [15]

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