Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Section of Geriatrics, Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2021 Dec;69(12):3476-3485. doi: 10.1111/jgs.17398. Epub 2021 Aug 12.
After hospitalization for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), older adults may be at increased risk for falls due to deconditioning, new medications, and worsening health status. Our primary objective was to identify risk factors for falls after AMI hospitalization among adults over age 75.
We used data from the Comprehensive Evaluation of Risk Factors in Older Patients with AMI (SILVER-AMI) study, a prospective cohort study of 3041 adults age 75 and older hospitalized with AMI at 94 community and academic medical centers across the United States. In-person interviews and physical assessments, as well as medical record review, were performed to collect demographic, clinical, functional, and psychosocial data. Falls were self-reported in telephone interviews and medically serious falls (those associated with emergency department use or hospitalization) were determined by medical record adjudication. Backward selection was used to identify predictors of fall risk in logistic regression analysis.
A total of 554 (21.6%) participants reported a fall and 191 (6.4%) had a medically serious fall within 6 months of discharge. Factors independently associated with self-reported falls included impaired mobility, prior fall history, longer hospital stay, visual impairment, and weak grip. Factors independently associated with medically serious falls included older age, polypharmacy, impaired functional mobility, prior fall history, and living alone.
Among older patients hospitalized for AMI, falls are common in the 6 months following discharge and associated with demographic, functional, and clinical factors that are readily identifiable. Fall risk should be considered in post-AMI clinical decision-making and interventions to prevent falls should be evaluated.
急性心肌梗死(AMI)住院后,老年人由于身体状况恶化、新药物治疗和功能下降等原因,可能面临更高的跌倒风险。我们的主要目标是确定 75 岁以上 AMI 住院患者发生跌倒的风险因素。
我们使用了来自美国 94 家社区和学术医疗中心的 3041 名 75 岁以上 AMI 住院患者的综合评估风险因素在老年患者中的应用(SILVER-AMI)研究的数据。通过面对面访谈和身体评估以及病历审查收集人口统计学、临床、功能和社会心理数据。通过电话访谈报告跌倒情况,通过病历审查确定医疗严重跌倒(与急诊使用或住院相关的跌倒)。采用向后选择法对逻辑回归分析中跌倒风险的预测因素进行分析。
共有 554 名(21.6%)参与者报告了跌倒,191 名(6.4%)在出院后 6 个月内发生了医疗严重跌倒。与自我报告的跌倒独立相关的因素包括活动能力受损、既往跌倒史、住院时间延长、视力障碍和握力减弱。与医疗严重跌倒独立相关的因素包括年龄较大、多药治疗、功能移动能力受损、既往跌倒史和独居。
在因 AMI 住院的老年患者中,跌倒在出院后 6 个月内很常见,与易于识别的人口统计学、功能和临床因素有关。在 AMI 后临床决策中应考虑跌倒风险,应评估预防跌倒的干预措施。