Non-Motor Outcomes
Cross-source consensus on Non-Motor Outcomes from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Background
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- Patient and public involvement directly informed the decision to capture multi-domain non-motor outcomes including fatigue, anxiety, depression, sleep disturbance, pain, social participation, and bowel/bladder dysfunction. — Stroke Investigation Group in North and Central London (SIGNAL): cohort profile of a prospective large-scale comprehensive stroke registry
- Fatigue, reduced social participation, and sleep disturbance were the three most prevalent adverse non-motor outcomes at 6 months, each affecting more than half of survivors. — Stroke Investigation Group in North and Central London (SIGNAL): cohort profile of a prospective large-scale comprehensive stroke registry
- Non-motor outcome data at 6 months were available for 92.3% of participants, representing one of the highest such rates in any UK stroke study. — Stroke Investigation Group in North and Central London (SIGNAL): cohort profile of a prospective large-scale comprehensive stroke registry
- SIGNAL captured outcomes spanning physical, cognitive, psychological, and social dimensions. — Stroke Investigation Group in North and Central London (SIGNAL): cohort profile of a prospective large-scale comprehensive stroke registry
- Pre-stroke non-motor status was addressed only qualitatively via patient self-report and carer information, limiting baseline comparisons. — Stroke Investigation Group in North and Central London (SIGNAL): cohort profile of a prospective large-scale comprehensive stroke registry