Physical Therapy Department, Faculty of Allied Medical Sciences, Isra University, Amman, Jordan.
Department of Family Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
J Geriatr Phys Ther. 2023;46(1):53-63. doi: 10.1519/JPT.0000000000000316. Epub 2021 Jun 30.
To identify the circumstances of falls and the factors associated with falls among older adults with cardiovascular disease (CVD).
Baseline (2012) data from the International Mobility in Aging Study (IMIAS), a cross-sectional study, were used. Falling was measured by the subjective question, "Have you fallen in the last 12 months?" Several subjective questions were asked to obtain information about the circumstances of falls. Potential clinical factors associated with falling were cognitive status, depressive symptoms, physical performance, grip strength, visual acuity, and fear of falling (FOF). These clinical factors were measured respectively with the Leganes Cognitive Test, the Center for Epidemiological Studies Scales Depressive Symptoms, the Short Physical Performance Battery, a Jamar handgrip dynamometer, the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) tumbling E chart placed at 2 m, and the Falls Efficacy Scale-International. A χ 2 test was used to determine whether there were significant differences in fall circumstances among older adults with and without CVD. Two-sample t tests were used to test for any significant differences between older adults with and without CVD. Bonferroni correction was applied to limit type I errors and was corrected to .007. Simple and multiple logistic regressions identified which clinical factors were associated with falling.
A total of 429 older adults with CVD (mean age 69.5 ± 2.9) and 431 older adults without CVD (69.2 ± 2.9) participated in the study. Approximately 53% of fallers with CVD had 2 or more falls compared with fallers without CVD (39%). The most common location for falling was at home (43%) for fallers with CVD or in the street (50%) for fallers without CVD. Approximately 9% of fallers with CVD needed to be hospitalized while only 3% of fallers without CVD were admitted to the hospital. Approximately 42% of fallers with CVD had some residual sequelae (eg, being unable to walk around the house or do housework) compared with only 27% of fallers without CVD. Fallers with CVD had significantly ( P value < .007) more depressive symptoms (mean ± SD, 14.7 ± 12.9) and poorer physical performance (8.4 ± 3.0) compared with fallers without CVD (10.1 ± 9.4 and 9.6 ± 2.5, respectively); however FOF was the only significant clinical factor ( P value < .05) associated with falling for older adults with CVD.
Incidence of recurrent falls is higher among older adults with CVD than those without CVD. Circumstances of falls among fallers with CVD differ from those identified among fallers without CVD. Fear of falling was the only predictor of fall history among older adults with CVD. The results suggest the merit of considering FOF when designing prevention and intervention programs to reduce falls among older adults with CVD.
确定心血管疾病(CVD)老年患者跌倒的情况和与跌倒相关的因素。
使用国际老龄化移动研究(IMIAS)的基线(2012 年)数据,这是一项横断面研究。通过主观问题“您在过去 12 个月中跌倒过吗?”来测量跌倒情况。为了获取跌倒情况的信息,询问了几个主观问题。与跌倒相关的潜在临床因素包括认知状态、抑郁症状、身体表现、握力、视力和跌倒恐惧(FOF)。这些临床因素分别使用拉雷纳斯认知测试、中心流行病学研究量表抑郁症状、简短身体表现电池、杰马手动测力计、早期糖尿病视网膜病变研究(ETDRS)滚动 E 图表(放置在 2 米处)和跌倒效能量表-国际进行测量。卡方检验用于确定 CVD 老年患者与非 CVD 老年患者跌倒情况是否存在显著差异。两样本 t 检验用于检验 CVD 老年患者与非 CVD 老年患者之间是否存在任何显著差异。Bonferroni 校正用于限制Ⅰ类错误,并校正至.007。简单和多元逻辑回归确定了哪些临床因素与跌倒有关。
共有 429 名患有 CVD(平均年龄 69.5 ± 2.9)的老年患者和 431 名没有 CVD(69.2 ± 2.9)的老年患者参加了这项研究。患有 CVD 的跌倒者中约有 53%有 2 次或更多次跌倒,而没有 CVD 的跌倒者中约有 39%有 2 次或更多次跌倒。患有 CVD 的跌倒者最常见的跌倒地点是在家(43%),而没有 CVD 的跌倒者最常见的跌倒地点是在街上(50%)。患有 CVD 的跌倒者中约有 9%需要住院治疗,而没有 CVD 的跌倒者中只有 3%需要住院治疗。患有 CVD 的跌倒者中有约 42%有一些后遗症(例如,无法在屋子里走动或做家务),而没有 CVD 的跌倒者中只有约 27%有后遗症。与没有 CVD 的跌倒者相比,患有 CVD 的跌倒者有明显更多的抑郁症状(均值 ± 标准差,14.7 ± 12.9)和更差的身体表现(8.4 ± 3.0)(P 值<.007);然而,FOF 是唯一与 CVD 老年患者跌倒相关的显著临床因素(P 值<.05)。
与没有 CVD 的老年患者相比,患有 CVD 的老年患者跌倒的复发发生率更高。患有 CVD 的跌倒者的跌倒情况与没有 CVD 的跌倒者的跌倒情况不同。跌倒恐惧是 CVD 老年患者跌倒史的唯一预测因素。这些结果表明,在设计预防和干预计划以减少 CVD 老年患者跌倒时,考虑 FOF 是有价值的。