Lifestyle Knowledge and Behavior Among Stroke and High-Risk Younger Adult Patients Through Sex, Age and Stroke Status Differences: A Cross-Sectional Study
Sarah Ibrahim,
Jasper R. Senff,
Troy Francis,
Aleksandra Stanimirovic,
Sharon Ng,
Lindsey Zhang,
Akshaya Ravi,
Leanne K. Casaubon,
Keithan Sivakumar,
Joanathan Rosand,
Sanjula Singh,
Valeria E. Rac,
Aleksandra Pikula,
Program for Health System and Technology Evaluation,
Toronto General Hospital Research Institute,
Jay and Sari Sonshine Centre for Stroke Prevention ,
Cerebrovascular Brain Health,
Toronto Western Hospital,
University Health Network,
Institute of Health Policy,
Management and Evaluation ,
Dalla Lana School of Public Health,
University of Toronto,
Centre for Advancing Collaborative Healthcare ,
University of Toronto,
Henry and Allison McCance Center for Brain Health,
Massachusetts General Hospital,
Department of Neurology,
Massachusetts General Hospital,
Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard,
Center for Genomic Medicine,
Massachusetts General Hospital,
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery,
Brain Center Rudolf Magnus,
University Medical Center Utrecht,
Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research at Peter Munk Cardiac Centre,
Toronto General Hospital Research Institute ,
University Health Network ,
Harvard Chan School of Public Health,
Faculty of Medicine,
Ottawa University,
Bloomberg School of Public Health,
Johns Hopkins University,
Department of Medicine,
Division of Neurology,
University of Toronto,
Department of Neurology,
Toronto Western Hospital,
Krembil Brain Institute
American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine
Published online on May 23, 2025
American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Background:The prevalence of stroke is projected to rise over the next 30 years, particularly among younger adults (≤65 years of age). Stroke is associated with modifiable risk factors, highlighting the importance of risk factor modification. However, to ...