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1.
Journal of Stroke ; : 361-370, 2023.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-1001598

ABSTRACT

Background@#and Purpose Social determinants of health (SDOH) are non-medical factors that may contribute to the development of diseases, with a higher representation in underserved populations. Our objective is to determine the association of unfavorable SDOH with self-reported stroke/transient ischemic attack (TIA) and vascular risk factors (VRFs) among Hispanic/Latino adults living in the US. @*Methods@#We used cross-sectional data from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos. SDOH and VRFs were assessed using questionnaires and validated scales and measurements. We investigated the association between the SDOH (individually and as count: ≤1, 2, 3, 4, or ≥5 SDOH), VRFs and stroke/TIA using regression analyses. @*Results@#For individuals with stroke/TIA (n=388), the mean age (58.9 years) differed from those without stroke/TIA (n=11,210; 46.8 years; P<0.0001). In bivariate analysis, income <$20,000, education less than high school, no health insurance, perceived discrimination, not currently employed, upper tertile for chronic stress, and lower tertiles for social support and language- and social-based acculturation were associated with stroke/TIA and retained further. A higher number of SDOH was directly associated with all individual VRFs investigated, except for at-risk alcohol, and with number of VRFs (β=0.11, 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.09–0.14). In the fully adjusted model, income, discrimination, social support, chronic stress, and employment status were individually associated with stroke/TIA; the odds of stroke/TIA were 2.3 times higher in individuals with 3 SDOH (95% CI 1.6–3.2) and 2.7 times (95% CI 1.9–3.7) for those with ≥5 versus ≤1 SDOH. @*Conclusion@#Among Hispanic/Latino adults, a higher number of SDOH is associated with increased odds for stroke/TIA and VRFs. The association remained significant after adjustment for VRFs, suggesting involvement of non-vascular mechanisms.

2.
International Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine ; (6): 140,143-2009.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-595314

ABSTRACT

Objective To observe the clinical effect of self-made Jingxuan decoction in treating vertebroarterial vertigo of cervical vertebra disease. Methods Sixty five patients were randomly recurited into a control group (30 cases) and a treatment group (35 cases). The contol group received safflor yellow and sodium chloride injection, deproteinised calf blood serum injection, flunarizini, and metroclopramidum; While the treatment group received self-made Jingxuan decoction besides the treatments in the control group. 7 days constituted a course of treatment. The curative effects were assessed after two courses of treatment. Results The effective rate was 94.29% in the treatment group and 76.67% in the control group, showing significant difference (P<0.05). Conclusion Self-made Jingxuan decoction is an effective drug for vertebroarterial vertebroarterial vertigo of cervical vertebra disease.

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