Abstract

Stroke is the second leading cause of death worldwide but also of disability. Stroke induces certain alterations of muscle metabolism associated with gross muscle atrophy and a decrease in muscle function, leading to sarcopenia. The vast majority of stroke cases occur in adults over 65 years of age, and the prevalence is expected to massively increase in the coming years in this population. Sarcopenia is associated with higher mortality and functional decline. Therefore, the identification of interventions that prevent muscle alterations after stroke is of great interest. The purpose of this review is to carry out a systematic literature review to identify evidence for nutritional and pharmacological interventions, which may prevent loss of muscle mass in the elderly after stroke. The search was performed on Medline in December 2018. Randomized controlled studies, observational studies and case reports conducted in the last 20 years on post-stroke patients aged 65 or older were included. In total, 684 studies were screened, and eight randomized control trials and two cohort studies were finally included and examined. This review reveals that interventions such as amino acid supplementation or anabolic steroid administration are efficient to prevent muscle mass. Little evidence is reported on nutritional aspects specifically in sarcopenia prevention after stroke. It pinpoints the need for future studies in this particular population.

Highlights

  • Stroke is the second leading cause of disability in the world

  • Two interventions were commenced in stroke phase while others wereothers including chronic stroke patients eitherpatients during either rehabilitation the acute stroke phase while were including chronic stroke during as inpatients [29,30]

  • The interventions tested by Yoshimura et al resulted in an increased protein intake (>1.2 g/day), which is consistent with nutritional recommendations for the prevention of age-related sarcopenia [37]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Stroke is the second leading cause of disability in the world. The number of stroke survivors with residual disabilities is constantly growing [1]. Two-thirds of hospitalized stroke cases are 65 years or more [2]. In the older patient population, the stroke outcomes are poorer with a higher mortality rate and higher functional decline [3]. Age is considered as a negative predictive factor of the rehabilitation outcome [4,5]. The factors influencing poor stroke outcome in older patients may include the higher number of comorbidities and poor nutritional status [6,7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call