International Journal of General Medicine | 2021

Increased Serum E-Selectin Levels Were Associated with Cognitive Decline in Patients with Stroke

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background Previous studies have reported that patients with stroke have a high incidence of cognitive decline. The aim was to elucidate the association between serum E-selectin levels and cognitive function in stroke patients. Materials and Methods Serum levels of E-selectin were measured in 322 patients with stroke at baseline. Cox proportional hazard analysis was used to evaluate the predictive value of serum E-selectin for predicting cognitive decline (end point) in patients with stroke. Results Multivariate linear regression analysis revealed that serum E-selectin levels were independently associated with MOCA score after adjusting for age, gender, BMI, current smoker, current drinker, admission systolic and diastolic BP, CVD history and laboratory measurements in patients with stroke at baseline (SĪ²= āˆ’0.156; 95% CI, - 0.170ā€“ - 0.074; P<0.001). The multivariate Cox proportional hazard analysis revealed that serum E-selectin (HR=2.481, 95% CI 1.533ā€“4.327, P-trend <0.001) was an independent prognostic factor for cognitive decline in these patients with stroke during the follow-up period. Conclusion Our results showed that increased serum E-selectin levels were significantly and independently associated with cognitive decline and had independent predictive value for cognitive decline in patients with stroke. Serum E-selectin might enable early recognition of cognitive decline among stroke patients.

Volume 14
Pages 733 - 739
DOI 10.2147/IJGM.S292171
Language English
Journal International Journal of General Medicine

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