Department of Kinesiology and Nutrition, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012 Apr;93(4):718-22. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2011.08.038. Epub 2012 Jan 2.
It has been suggested that obesity increases fall risk, based on diminished static balance and increased fall-related injury risk. However, these findings only indirectly relate obesity and falls. The purpose of this study was to use existing data to directly explore the relationship between obesity and falls by community-dwelling women aged 55 years and older. Eighty-six subjects (42 obese) reported falls occurring during the previous year (retrospective falls), and over the following year responded to biweekly communications inquiring whether they fell or stumbled (prospective falls/stumbles). Because trips represent the largest fall cause by community-dwelling adults, we also analyzed outcomes and recovery strategies of 25 women (13 obese) after laboratory-induced trips. Obese and healthy weight women retrospectively reported similar fall rates (40.9% vs 40.5%; P=.97). Similar percentages of healthy weight and obese women prospectively fell (64.7% vs 64.3%; P=.98) and stumbled (38.9% vs 14.3%; P=.24). After laboratory-induced trips, 46.2% of obese verse 25.0% of healthy weight women fell (P=.44). Unlike healthy weight fallers, most obese fallers failed to initiate or complete the recovery step before full-body harness support. Obesity does not appear to increase overall fall risk; although, fall rates after laboratory-induced trips were notably higher, potentially due to altered recovery responses. An incomplete recovery step could increase impact force with the ground, predisposing obese individuals to injury. The fact that there is concurrence between 4 independent outcomes strengthens the findings, suggesting that further, large-scale studies are warranted to inform future clinical practice regarding fall-risk assessment for obese older adults.
有人认为,肥胖会降低静态平衡能力,并增加与跌倒相关的受伤风险,从而增加跌倒风险。然而,这些发现只是间接地将肥胖与跌倒联系起来。本研究的目的是利用现有数据,通过对 55 岁及以上的社区居住女性,直接探讨肥胖与跌倒之间的关系。86 名受试者(42 名肥胖)报告了过去一年(回顾性跌倒)中发生的跌倒事件,在接下来的一年中,他们每隔两周就会收到询问是否跌倒或绊倒的通讯(前瞻性跌倒/绊倒)。由于绊倒是社区居住成年人最大的跌倒原因,我们还分析了 25 名女性(13 名肥胖)在实验室诱发绊倒后的结果和恢复策略。肥胖和健康体重的女性回顾性报告的跌倒率相似(40.9%比 40.5%;P=.97)。健康体重和肥胖女性前瞻性跌倒(64.7%比 64.3%;P=.98)和绊倒(38.9%比 14.3%;P=.24)的比例相似。在实验室诱发的绊倒后,46.2%的肥胖女性跌倒,而健康体重女性的这一比例为 25.0%(P=.44)。与健康体重的跌倒者不同,大多数肥胖的跌倒者在全身安全带支撑之前,未能启动或完成恢复步骤。肥胖似乎不会增加总体跌倒风险;然而,实验室诱发的绊倒后跌倒率明显较高,可能是由于恢复反应改变。恢复步骤不完整可能会增加与地面的冲击力,使肥胖者更容易受伤。4 个独立结果之间的一致性增强了这一发现,表明有必要进行进一步的、大规模的研究,为肥胖老年人的跌倒风险评估提供未来的临床实践依据。