Wong Ting Hway, Nguyen Hai V, Chiu Ming Terk, Chow Khuan Yew, Ong Marcus Eng Hock, Lim Gek Hsiang, Nadkarni Nivedita Vikas, Bautista Dianne Carrol Tan, Cheng Jolene Yu Xuan, Loo Lynette Mee Ann, Seow Dennis Chuen Chai
Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, Singapore; Duke-National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
Duke-National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
PLoS One. 2015 Sep 1;10(9):e0137127. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137127. eCollection 2015.
Frailty is associated with adverse outcomes including disability, mortality and risk of falls. Trauma registries capture a broad range of injuries. However, frail patients who fall comprise a large proportion of the injuries occurring in ageing populations and are likely to have different outcomes compared to non-frail injured patients. The effect of frail fallers on mortality is under-explored but potentially significant. Currently, many trauma registries define low falls as less than three metres, a height that is likely to include non-frailty falls. We hypothesized that the low fall from less than 0.5 metres, including same-level falls, is a surrogate marker of frailty and predicts long-term mortality in older trauma patients.
Using data from the Singapore National Trauma Registry, 2011-2013, matched till September 2014 to the death registry, we analysed adults aged over 45 admitted via the emergency department in public hospitals sustaining blunt injuries with an injury severity score (ISS) of 9 or more, excluding isolated hip fractures from same-level falls in the over 65. Patients injured by a low fall were compared to patients injured by high fall and other blunt mechanisms. Logistic regression was used to analyze 12-month mortality, controlling for mechanism of injury, ISS, revised trauma score (RTS), co-morbidities, gender, age and age-gender interaction. Different low fall height definitions, adjusting for injury regions, and analyzing the entire adult cohort were used in sensitivity analyses and did not change our findings.
Of the 8111 adults in our cohort, patients who suffered low falls were more likely to die of causes unrelated to their injuries (p<0.001), compared to other blunt trauma and higher fall heights. They were at higher risk of 12-month mortality (OR 1.75, 95% CI 1.18-2.58, p = 0.005), independent of ISS, RTS, age, gender, age-gender interaction and co-morbidities. Falls that were higher than 0.5m did not show this pattern. Males were at higher risk of mortality after low falls. The effect of age on mortality started at age 55 for males, and age 70 for females, and the difference was attributable to the additional mortality in male low-fallers.
The low fall mechanism can optimize prediction of long-term mortality after moderate and severe injury, and may be a surrogate marker of frailty, complementing broader-based studies on aging.
衰弱与包括残疾、死亡率和跌倒风险在内的不良后果相关。创伤登记系统记录了广泛的损伤情况。然而,跌倒的衰弱患者在老年人群体发生的损伤中占很大比例,并且与非衰弱的受伤患者相比可能有不同的结局。衰弱跌倒者对死亡率的影响尚未得到充分研究,但可能具有重要意义。目前,许多创伤登记系统将低高度跌倒定义为低于三米,这个高度可能包括非衰弱性跌倒。我们假设低于0.5米的低高度跌倒,包括同一平面跌倒,是衰弱的一个替代指标,并可预测老年创伤患者的长期死亡率。
利用新加坡国家创伤登记系统2011 - 2013年的数据,匹配至2014年9月的死亡登记系统,我们分析了45岁以上通过公立医院急诊科入院、遭受钝性损伤且损伤严重程度评分(ISS)为9或更高的成年人,排除65岁以上同一平面跌倒导致的单纯髋部骨折。将低高度跌倒受伤的患者与高高度跌倒受伤的患者以及其他钝性致伤机制导致受伤的患者进行比较。采用逻辑回归分析12个月的死亡率,控制损伤机制、ISS、修正创伤评分(RTS)、合并症、性别、年龄以及年龄 -性别的交互作用。敏感性分析采用不同的低高度跌倒定义,调整损伤部位,并分析整个成年队列,结果未改变我们的发现。
在我们的队列中的8111名成年人中,与其他钝性创伤和更高高度跌倒相比,低高度跌倒的患者更有可能死于与损伤无关的原因(p<0.001)。他们12个月死亡率的风险更高(比值比1.75,95%置信区间1.18 - 2.58,p = 0.005),独立于ISS、RTS、年龄、性别、年龄 -性别的交互作用和合并症。高于0.5米的跌倒未显示出这种模式。男性在低高度跌倒后死亡率风险更高。年龄对死亡率的影响在男性为55岁开始,女性为70岁开始,差异归因于男性低高度跌倒者额外的死亡率。
低高度跌倒机制可优化对中重度损伤后长期死亡率的预测,并且可能是衰弱的一个替代指标,对更广泛的衰老研究起到补充作用。