Abstract

Plain Language SummaryStroke is a leading cause of dead and disability in the world. It is an acute condition prevalent in older populations. As more older adults surviving previously fatal strokes, the prevalence of stroke survivors with different functional and cognitive impairments increase. There is a great heterogeneity in outcome after stroke, even in milder strokes. We know less of what predict poor outcome. While increasing age in general is associated with poor outcome, at individual plan the relationship with age is more uncertain. Frailty is a concept gaining more attention over the recent years. It is defined as a condition of vulnerability associated with an increased risk of adverse health outcomes such as functional decline and mortality. Frail people have an increased risk of developing disease when something extraordinary occurs. Less is known about the relationship between stroke and frailty. Frailty assessment is not yet part of routine stroke care. In this study, we explored the impact of pre-stroke frailty on functional dependency and mortality 3 years after stroke. We found that the degree of frailty before stroke had a huge impact on functional status and mortality 3 years after stroke, even when we adjusted for important factors, like stroke severity and age. This demonstrates the importance of implementing frailty measures as a routine tool in stroke medicine. It also underline the value of developing preventing mechanisms of frailty in the older population.

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