Abstract
SAN FRANCISCO – Dr. Edgar Pierluissi, medical director of the Acute Care for Elders Unit at San Francisco General Hospital, recently looked at falls in elders by the numbers. First, they’re the number one cause of hip fractures, he reminded his audience at a conference on osteoporosis sponsored by the University of California, San Francisco. Other numbers from Dr. Pierluissi: 75: Physicians should ask patients aged 75 years or older if they’ve had any falls in the prior year or if they have balance or gait difficulties and observe them walking and getting into and out of a chair. 3–4: A fall in the previous year increases the risk for a future fall 3to 4-fold. 50: Studies suggest that 50% of adults over age 80 years will fall in the next year. 31: Falls in adults aged 65 years or older cause injury in approximately 31% of cases. 4: Muscle weakness quadruples the risk for a fall. 3: A gait deficit, balance deficit, or use of an assistive device nearly triples the risk for falling. 2: A visual deficit, arthritis, depression, or impaired activities of daily living more than double the risk for a fall. Cognitive impairment, use of some types of medications, or age older than 80 years each nearly doubles the risk for falling. 111: A Cochrane Review of 111 randomized controlled trials with 55,303 participants identified effective interventions to reduce the risk of falling (Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. 2009 [doi:10.1002/14651858.CD007146. pub2]). A number of forms of exercise reduced falls. Group tai chi exercise or multiplecomponent group exercise was effective if it targeted at least two of the following: strength, balance, flexibility, and endurance. Conducting a multifactorial falls evaluation reduces the number of falls. In patients with visual impairment and a high risk of falling, assessing and modifying home hazards was effective. Withdrawing psychotropic medications and educating primary care physicians about the risk of falls association with drug therapy reduced the number of falls but not the number who fell. Vitamin D supplementation may reduce falls in people with low vitamin D levels, but it’s unclear whether this helps people with adequate vitamin D levels. The Cochrane Review suggested that wearing hip protectors may provide some marginally significant benefit to frail, older adults in institutional care but not to older people who remain ambulant in the community, Dr. Pierluissi said. One randomized controlled trial of 1,042 residents in 37 nursing homes found a high rate of adherence to wearing hip protectors (74%) but these did not reduce the risk for hip fracture during the 20-month study. Residents served as their own controls by wearing hip protectors with padding on one hip but not the other. Investigators stopped the study early due to lack of efficacy, with hip fractures on 3.1% of the protected hips and 2.5% of unprotected hips, a statistically nonsignificant difference (JAMA 2007;298:413-22). Dr. Pierluissi said he has no relevant conflict of interest. CfA
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