Allan Louise M, Ballard Clive G, Rowan Elise N, Kenny Rose Anne
Institute for Ageing and Health, Wolfson Research Centre, Newcastle General Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2009;4(5):e5521. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005521. Epub 2009 May 13.
Falls are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in dementia, but there have been no prospective studies of risk factors for falling specific to this patient population, and no successful falls intervention/prevention trials. This prospective study aimed to identify modifiable risk factors for falling in older people with mild to moderate dementia.
179 participants aged over 65 years were recruited from outpatient clinics in the UK (38 Alzheimer's disease (AD), 32 Vascular dementia (VAD), 30 Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), 40 Parkinson's disease with dementia (PDD), 39 healthy controls). A multifactorial assessment of baseline risk factors was performed and fall diaries were completed prospectively for 12 months. Dementia participants experienced nearly 8 times more incident falls (9118/1000 person-years) than controls (1023/1000 person-years; incidence density ratio: 7.58, 3.11-18.5). In dementia, significant univariate predictors of sustaining at least one fall included diagnosis of Lewy body disorder (proportional hazard ratio (HR) adjusted for age and sex: 3.33, 2.11-5.26), and history of falls in the preceding 12 months (HR: 2.52, 1.52-4.17). In multivariate analyses, significant potentially modifiable predictors were symptomatic orthostatic hypotension (HR: 2.13, 1.19-3.80), autonomic symptom score (HR per point 0-36: 1.055, 1.012-1.099), and Cornell depression score (HR per point 0-40: 1.053, 1.01-1.099). Higher levels of physical activity were protective (HR per point 0-9: 0.827, 0.716-0.956).
The management of symptomatic orthostatic hypotension, autonomic symptoms and depression, and the encouragement of physical activity may provide the core elements for the most fruitful strategy to reduce falls in people with dementia. Randomised controlled trials to assess such a strategy are a priority.
跌倒在痴呆症患者的发病和死亡原因中占主要部分,但此前尚无针对该特定患者群体跌倒风险因素的前瞻性研究,也没有成功的跌倒干预/预防试验。这项前瞻性研究旨在确定轻度至中度痴呆症老年人跌倒的可改变风险因素。
从英国门诊诊所招募了179名65岁以上的参与者(38例阿尔茨海默病(AD)、32例血管性痴呆(VAD)、30例路易体痴呆(DLB)、40例帕金森病痴呆(PDD)、39例健康对照)。对基线风险因素进行了多因素评估,并前瞻性地记录了12个月的跌倒日记。痴呆症参与者的跌倒发生率(9118/1000人年)是对照组(1023/1000人年)的近8倍(发病密度比:7.58,3.11 - 18.5)。在痴呆症患者中,至少发生一次跌倒的显著单因素预测因素包括路易体障碍诊断(经年龄和性别调整的比例风险比(HR):3.33,2.11 - 5.26)以及过去12个月内的跌倒史(HR:2.52,1.52 - 4.17)。在多变量分析中,显著的潜在可改变预测因素为症状性体位性低血压(HR:2.13,1.19 - 3.80)、自主神经症状评分(每0至36分的HR:1.055,1.012 - 1.099)以及康奈尔抑郁评分(每0至40分的HR:1.053,1.01 - 1.099)。较高水平的身体活动具有保护作用(每0至9分的HR:0.827,0.716 - 0.956)。
对症状性体位性低血压、自主神经症状和抑郁的管理,以及鼓励身体活动,可能是减少痴呆症患者跌倒最有效策略的核心要素。评估此类策略的随机对照试验是当务之急。