Research Article

[Retracted] Potential Factors for Psychological Symptoms at Three Months in Patients with Young Ischemic Stroke

Table 2

Comparisons on clinical characteristics between young ischemic stroke patients with and without psychological symptoms.

CharacteristicsPatients without psychological symptoms
()
Patients with psychological symptoms
(
1

Age (years), 0.46
Male sex, % ()37.1 (105)34.6 (28)0.68
Urban residents, % ()97.2 (275)97.5 (79)1.00
Senior high school or higher, % ()93.6 (265)91.4 (74)0.47
Married, % ()67.5 (191)80.2 (65)0.03
Had medical insurance, % ()98.9 (280)97.5 (79)0.34
Monthly income>6000 yuan, % ()55.8 (158)60.5 (49)0.45
Smoker, % ()23.3 (66)14.8 (12)0.10
Drinker, % ()24.4 (69)29.6 (24)0.34
Hypertension, % ()10.2 (29)21.0 (17)0.01
Diabetes, % ()12.4 (35)12.4 (10)1.00
Atrial fibrillation, % ()20.1 (57)18.5 (15)0.75
Infact location, % ()0.06
 Cortex32.5 (92)21.0 (17)
 White matter lesions4.6 (13)0.0 (0)
 Basal ganglia + thalamus32.5 (92)39.5 (32)
 Brain stem23.3 (66)29.6 (24)
 Cerebellum7.1 (20)9.9 (8)
Infarct size mm3, 0.01
NHISS score, 0.61
mRS score, 0.78
Bl score, 0.70
Total SCL-90, <0.01
FFAS total score, 0.75
 7-1015.6 (44)24.7 (20)<0.01
 4-652.3 (148)30.7 (25)
 0-332.2 (91)44.4 (36)
SSRS total score, 0.27
 <209.2 (26)7.4 (6)0.09
 20-3022.6 (64)34.6 (28)
 >3068.2 (193)28.0 (47)
Subjective support, 0.22
Objective support, 0.16
Utilization of support, 0.85

Abbreviations: SD: standard deviance; NIHSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale; mRS: the modified Rankin Scale; BI: Barthel Index; FFAS: the Family function assessment scale; SSRS: the Social support rating scale; 1 was obtained using chi-square tests or Fisher’s exact tests for categorical variables and Mann–Whitney tests for continuous variables.