Department of Emergency Medicine, Taipei Medical University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC (Dr Yu); Institute of Injury Prevention and Control, College of Public Health and Nutrition, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC (Drs Yu and Lin); and Department of Nursing, National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC (Dr Hwang).
J Head Trauma Rehabil. 2022;37(4):220-229. doi: 10.1097/HTR.0000000000000708. Epub 2021 Jul 26.
To investigate differences between older men and women in Taiwan in personal and situational risk factors for sustaining a traumatic brain injury (TBI) versus soft-tissue injury (STI) due to a fall.
Matched case-control study.
Cases were defined as patients with a primary diagnosis of TBI due to a fall and were identified from those 60 years or older who visited the emergency department (ED) of 3 university-affiliated hospitals in 2015. Matched by the same hospital ED, gender, and time of falling, 3 controls who had no TBI and who had sustained only soft-tissue injury (STI) due to falling were selected for comparison with each case. Personal factors and situational exposures were compared between the control and case groups. In total, 96 cases and 288 controls in men and 72 cases and 216 controls in women participated in this study.
Personal factors (sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, medical characteristics, and functional abilities) and situational exposures (location, activities before the fall, center-of-mass change, type of fall, falling direction, protective response, and impact during the fall).
In men, after adjusting for other variables, older age (odds ratio [OR] = 1.04), regular alcohol use (OR = 2.03), an indoor fall (OR = 1.92), activity of getting in/out of bed (OR = 2.56), a fall due to dizziness (OR = 4.09), and falling backward (OR = 2.95) were independently associated with a higher odds of TBI. In women, an older age (OR = 1.03), the presence of Parkinson disease (OR = 10.4), activities of toileting (OR = 2.50), getting in/out of bed (OR = 4.90), and negotiating stairs (OR = 7.13), a fall due to dizziness (OR = 5.05), and falling backward (OR = 2.61) were independently associated with a higher odds of TBI.
Our results demonstrated similarities and differences in personal and situational risk factors for fall-related TBIs versus STIs between older men and women, and gender differences should be considered when developing intervention strategies.
研究台湾地区老年男性和女性在因跌倒导致创伤性脑损伤(TBI)与软组织损伤(STI)的个人和情境危险因素方面的差异。
配对病例对照研究。
病例定义为因跌倒导致原发性 TBI 的患者,这些患者于 2015 年就诊于 3 所大学附属医院急诊科,年龄均在 60 岁或以上。通过同一医院急诊科、性别和跌倒时间进行配对,选择 3 名无 TBI 且仅因跌倒导致 STI 的对照组患者与每个病例进行比较。比较对照组和病例组之间的个人因素和情境暴露情况。共有 96 例男性病例和 288 例男性对照组,72 例女性病例和 216 例女性对照组参与了这项研究。
个人因素(社会人口统计学和生活方式因素、医疗特征和功能能力)和情境暴露(地点、跌倒前的活动、质心变化、跌倒类型、跌倒方向、保护反应和跌倒过程中的冲击)。
在男性中,调整其他变量后,年龄较大(比值比 [OR] = 1.04)、经常饮酒(OR = 2.03)、室内跌倒(OR = 1.92)、从床上上下活动(OR = 2.56)、因头晕而跌倒(OR = 4.09)和向后跌倒(OR = 2.95)与 TBI 的发生几率较高独立相关。在女性中,年龄较大(OR = 1.03)、帕金森病(OR = 10.4)、如厕活动(OR = 2.50)、从床上上下活动(OR = 4.90)和上下楼梯活动(OR = 7.13)、因头晕而跌倒(OR = 5.05)和向后跌倒(OR = 2.61)与 TBI 的发生几率较高独立相关。
我们的研究结果表明,老年男性和女性跌倒相关 TBI 与 STI 的个人和情境危险因素存在相似和不同之处,在制定干预策略时应考虑性别差异。