Abstract

Background: Efficient treatment of modifiable vascular risk factors decreases reoccurrence of ischemic stroke, which is of uttermost importance in younger patients. In this longitudinal pilot study, we thus assessed the effect of a newly developed smartphone app for risk factor management in such a cohort.Methods: The app conveys key facts about stroke, provides motivational support for a healthy lifestyle, and a reminder function for medication intake and blood pressure measurement. Between January 2019 and February 2020, we consecutively invited patients with ischemic stroke aged between 18 and 55 years to participate. Patients in the intervention group used the app between hospital discharge and 3-month follow-up. The control group received standard clinical care. Modifiable risk factors (physical activity, nutrition, alcohol consumption, smoking behavior, obesity, and hypertension) were assessed during the initial hospital stay and at a dedicated stroke outpatient department three months post-stroke.Results: The study cohort comprised 21 patients in the app intervention group (62% male; age = 41 ± 11 years; education = 12 ± 3 years) and 21 sex-, age- and education-matched control patients with a comparable stroke risk factor profile. Baseline stroke severity was comparable between groups (intervention: median NIHSS = 3; control: median NIHSS = 4; p = 0.604). Three months post-stroke, patients in the intervention group reported to be physically almost twice as active (13 ± 9 h/week) compared to controls (7 ± 5 h/week; p = 0.022). More intense app usage was strongly associated with higher physical activity (r = 0.60, p = 0.005) and lower consumption of unhealthy food (r = −0.51, p = 0.023). Smoking behavior (p = 0.001) and hypertension (p = 0.003) improved in all patients. Patients in the intervention group described better self-reported health-related quality of life three months post-stroke (p = 0.003).Conclusions: Specifically designed app interventions can be an easily to implement and cost-efficient approach to promote a healthier lifestyle in younger patients with a stroke.

Highlights

  • Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability in adults [1], affecting multiple domains such as cognition, motor function, and speech [2, 3]

  • We developed a smartphone app for secondary stroke prevention combining motivational support for a healthy lifestyle, medication adherence, and stroke education

  • From the initially invited 50 young patients with ischemic stroke, 60% were willing to participate in the app intervention

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Summary

Introduction

Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability in adults [1], affecting multiple domains such as cognition, motor function, and speech [2, 3]. Most young patients with stroke have a remaining life expectancy of decades and an increased risk for recurrent stroke [6]. A recent observational study in 1,730 representative patients with stroke reported an alarmingly high proportion of patients with at least one inadequately treated risk condition (up to 95% when considering vascular and lifestyle risk factors) [10]. Efficient treatment of modifiable vascular risk factors decreases reoccurrence of ischemic stroke, which is of uttermost importance in younger patients. In this longitudinal pilot study, we assessed the effect of a newly developed smartphone app for risk factor management in such a cohort

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