SCI Mobility Lab, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Kinesiology, Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
Spinal Cord. 2019 Jul;57(7):526-539. doi: 10.1038/s41393-019-0274-4. Epub 2019 Apr 9.
Falls are detrimental to the well-being of individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI). To establish effective fall prevention initiatives, a comprehensive understanding of falls after SCI is needed.
To report the incidence proportion of falls and summarize the factors contributing to falls in individuals with SCI.
Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Eight databases were searched. Abstracts/full articles were screened by two researchers independently. Data concerning study design, participant characteristics, and the incidence proportion, factors, and consequences of falls were extracted. Risk of bias was assessed using a domain-based approach that considered sampling and measurement bias. The incidence proportions of falls were pooled for ambulators and wheelchair users separately using random-effects meta-analyses, and compared descriptively for inpatients and community-dwelling individuals. Fall-related factors were organized according to the Biological, Behavioral, Social & Economic and Environmental Model of fall risk.
The search resulted in 1706 articles; 24 unique studies were included. The risk of sampling bias was high. All but one study focused on community-dwelling individuals; 78% (95% confidence interval 73-83%, I = 0%) of ambulators and 69% (95% confidence interval 60-76%, I = 59%) of wheelchair users fell ≥1 over 12 months. In contrast, only 13% of inpatients fell. Most fall-related factors were categorized as biological (e.g., muscle weakness), behavioral (e.g., inattentiveness) or environmental (e.g., uneven surfaces).
Falls are frequent among community-dwelling individuals with SCI. A variety of biological, behavioral, and environmental factors contribute to falls, some of which are modifiable and may be addressed through SCI-specific fall prevention initiatives.
跌倒对脊髓损伤(SCI)患者的健康有害。为了建立有效的跌倒预防措施,需要全面了解 SCI 后的跌倒情况。
报告跌倒的发生率比例,并总结导致 SCI 患者跌倒的因素。
系统回顾和荟萃分析。
检索了 8 个数据库。两位研究人员独立筛选摘要/全文。提取有关研究设计、参与者特征,以及跌倒的发生率比例、因素和后果的数据。使用基于领域的方法评估偏倚风险,该方法考虑了抽样和测量偏倚。使用随机效应荟萃分析分别对步行者和轮椅使用者的跌倒发生率进行汇总,并对住院患者和社区居住者进行描述性比较。跌倒相关因素根据跌倒风险的生物、行为、社会和经济以及环境模型进行组织。
搜索结果产生了 1706 篇文章;纳入了 24 项独特的研究。抽样偏倚的风险很高。除了一项研究外,所有研究都集中在社区居住的个体上;12 个月内,步行者中有 78%(95%置信区间 73-83%,I=0%)和轮椅使用者中有 69%(95%置信区间 60-76%,I=59%)跌倒≥1 次。相比之下,只有 13%的住院患者跌倒。大多数与跌倒相关的因素被归类为生物因素(例如,肌肉无力)、行为因素(例如,注意力不集中)或环境因素(例如,不平坦的表面)。
在社区居住的 SCI 患者中,跌倒很常见。各种生物、行为和环境因素导致跌倒,其中一些因素是可以改变的,可以通过特定于 SCI 的跌倒预防措施来解决。