Severe Stroke More Likely for People Who Smoke or Have High Blood Pressure or Atrial Fibrillation

Smoking, high blood pressure, and a type of irregular heartbeat known as atrial fibrillation may play a bigger role than other risk factors in increasing the odds of severe disability or death after a stroke, a new study suggests.

Several other risk factors were also associated with an increased risk of stroke, but impacted the odds of death or severe disability to a lesser degree. These included diabetes, high cholesterol, drinking alcohol, lack of exercise, unhealthy eating habits, stress, and excess body fat around the waist.

“Our findings emphasize the importance of controlling high blood pressure — which is the most important modifiable risk factor for stroke globally — along with managing atrial fibrillation and avoiding smoking,” says lead study author Catriona Reddin, MBBS, PhD, of the University of Galway in Ireland.

Factors That Increase the Risk of Severe Stroke

The study included almost 27,000 adults who were 62 years old on average, half of whom had experienced a stroke. Among those who did have a stroke, about 4,850 had a severe stroke, which the study defined as becoming unable to walk or attend to daily tasks like eating or getting dressed without aid, up to death.

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