Abstract

Medical comorbidities may contribute to falls and thus require identification for education and prevention. We hypothesized that the epidemiology and injuries seen will be similar to the literature, with most falls that result in injury occurring in the elderly, to prominent facial structures, and are associated with specific comorbidities. A retrospective review was performed of patients evaluated by the Trauma and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery services after sustaining traumatic facial injury from July 2015 to June 2016 as a result of a fall. Associations between injury patterns, previous falls, and medical comorbidities were analyzed, and descriptive and bivariate statistics were reported. Of 152 patients included, 53.3% were females with a mean age of 61.2years. Soft tissue laceration was seen in 59.9% of patients. The 3 most common fracture patterns seen were nasal fracture in 30.9%, orbital fracture in 30.3%, and zygoma fracture in 20.4%. Cardiovascular disease (53.3%) was the most common comorbidity. No major comorbidity was seen in 32.9% of patients. There was a significant association between orbital fracture and neurologic disease (P=.04). Patients with neurologic disease had a significantly longer length of stay (P<.001), and those without any major comorbidities had a significantly shorter length of stay (P=.02). Patients with previous emergency department visits for falls were significantly older (P=.03), had more comorbidities (P=.005), and were more likely to have cardiovascular disease and associated comorbidities (P=.001). The results are consistent with the literature, with the most fall-related trauma occurring in the elderly with injury to prominent facial structures. The most common comorbidity was cardiovascular disease, which was associated with previous falls. There is a significant association between neurologic disease and orbital fractures. Future studies should focus on recurrent falls after receiving appropriate education to reduce risk based on their specific comorbidities.

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