Department of Health and Care Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, N-9037, Tromsø, Norway.
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Clinic of Cardiothoracic Surgery, St. Olavs Hospital Trondheim University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway.
BMC Geriatr. 2017 Dec 27;17(1):292. doi: 10.1186/s12877-017-0689-8.
Falls are common among elderly people, and the risk increase with age. Falls are associated with both health and social consequences for the patient, and major societal costs. Identification of risk factors should be investigated to prevent falls. Previous studies have shown anemia to be associated with increased risk of falling, but the results are inconsistent. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between anemia and self-reported falls among community-living elderly people. The study is a replication of the study by Thaler-Kall and colleagues from 2014, who studied the association between anemia and self-reported falls among 967 women and men 65 years and older in the KORA-Age study from 2009.
We included 2441 participants (54% women) 65 years and older from the population-based Tromsø 5 Study 2001-2002. Logistic regression models were used to investigate the association between anemia (hemoglobin <12 g/dL in women and <13 g/dL in men) or hemoglobin level and self-reported falls last year, adjusted for sex, age, medication use and disability. Further, associations between combinations of anemia and frailty or disability, and falls, were investigated.
No statistical significant associations were found between anemia and falls (OR 95% CI: 0.83, 0.50-1.37) or hemoglobin level and falls (OR, 95% CI: 0.94, 0.81-1.09), or with combinations of anemia and frailty or disability, and falls (OR, 95%: CI: 0.94, 0.40-2.22 and 0.78, 0.34-1.81, respectively).
In this replication analysis, in accordance with the results from the original study, no statistically significant association between anemia or hemoglobin and falls was found among community-living women and men aged 65 years or older.
老年人中常见跌倒,且随着年龄增长风险增加。跌倒会对患者的健康和社交产生影响,并导致巨大的社会成本。应调查识别危险因素以预防跌倒。先前的研究表明贫血与跌倒风险增加有关,但结果不一致。本研究旨在调查社区居住的老年人中贫血与自我报告跌倒之间的关联。该研究是对 Thaler-Kall 及其同事 2014 年研究的复制,他们研究了 2009 年 KORA-Age 研究中 967 名 65 岁及以上女性和男性的贫血与自我报告跌倒之间的关联。
我们纳入了 2001-2002 年基于人群的特罗姆瑟 5 研究中的 2441 名 65 岁及以上参与者(54%为女性)。使用逻辑回归模型调查贫血(女性血红蛋白<12g/dL,男性血红蛋白<13g/dL)或血红蛋白水平与去年自我报告跌倒之间的关系,调整性别、年龄、用药情况和残疾情况。此外,还调查了贫血与虚弱或残疾组合与跌倒之间的关联。
贫血与跌倒(OR 95%CI:0.83,0.50-1.37)或血红蛋白水平与跌倒(OR 95%CI:0.94,0.81-1.09)之间无统计学显著关联,也与贫血和虚弱或残疾组合与跌倒之间无统计学显著关联(OR 95%CI:0.94,0.40-2.22 和 0.78,0.34-1.81)。
在这项复制分析中,与原始研究的结果一致,在年龄 65 岁及以上的社区居住的女性和男性中,贫血或血红蛋白与跌倒之间没有统计学显著关联。