Brown Joshua D, Sato Reiko, Morley John E
Rx-Epitome, LLC, Gainesville, FL 32606, USA.
Patient and Health Impact, Pfizer Inc., Collegeville, PA 19426, USA.
J Clin Med. 2021 Aug 25;10(17):3802. doi: 10.3390/jcm10173802.
Pathophysiological changes after acute hospitalizations may influence physical functioning in older adults, which can lead to disability and loss of independence. This study evaluated the association between pneumonia, fracture, heart attack, stroke, and other hospitalizations with major mobility disability (MMD) and gait speed. This was a secondary analysis of the Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders (LIFE) Study, which was conducted across eight sites during 2010-2013 with longitudinal follow-up for 1635 individuals over an average of 2.6 years. Participants included adults ≥70 years old with pre-existing mobility limitations randomized to a physical activity intervention or a health education control arm. Hospitalizations were recorded via self-report and adjudicated by medical reviewers. MMD was measured by the inability to complete a 400 m walk test, or other proxies, as a binary outcome. Gait speed was recorded during the walk test in meters per second (m/s) and measured on a linear scale. Mixed-effects repeated measures regression adjusted for baseline demographics, comorbid conditions, and frailty. Among the 1635 participants, there were 1458 hospitalizations, which included 80 (5.5% of all hospitalizations) cases of pneumonia, 92 (6.3%) hospitalized fractures, 87 (6.0%) heart attacks, and 61 (4.2%) strokes. In the short-term measurement period immediately following hospitalization (1 day to 6 months), stroke (OR = 3.98 (3.41-4.54)) had the strongest association with MMD followed by fracture (OR = 3.03 (2.54-3.52)), pneumonia (OR = 2.76 (2.23-3.30)), and heart attack (OR = 2.03 (1.52-2.53)). Associations with long-term (6-12 months after) MMD were decreased or not significant for all causes. Pneumonia, fracture, stroke, and other hospitalizations were associated with short-term relative gait speed changes between -4.8% up to -19.5%, and only fracture was associated with long-term changes. Hospitalizations for pneumonia, heart attack, stroke, and fractures were associated with short-term decreases in mobility in older adults. Older adults may be at risk for decreased mobility and disability following acute hospitalizations, with the magnitude determined by the cause of the precipitating event.
急性住院后的病理生理变化可能会影响老年人的身体功能,进而导致残疾和失去独立生活能力。本研究评估了肺炎、骨折、心脏病发作、中风以及其他住院情况与严重活动障碍(MMD)和步速之间的关联。这是对老年人生活方式干预与独立性(LIFE)研究的二次分析,该研究于2010 - 2013年在八个地点开展,对1635名个体进行了平均2.6年的纵向随访。参与者包括70岁及以上且已有活动受限的成年人,他们被随机分配到体育活动干预组或健康教育对照组。住院情况通过自我报告记录,并由医学评审员进行判定。MMD通过无法完成400米步行测试或其他替代指标来衡量,作为二元结局。步速在步行测试期间以米/秒(m/s)记录,并采用线性量表进行测量。采用混合效应重复测量回归分析,并对基线人口统计学特征、合并症和衰弱情况进行了调整。在1635名参与者中,共发生了1458次住院,其中包括80例(占所有住院的5.5%)肺炎、92例(6.3%)住院骨折、87例(6.0%)心脏病发作和61例(4.2%)中风。在住院后的短期测量期(1天至6个月)内,中风(OR = 3.98(3.41 - 4.54))与MMD的关联最强,其次是骨折(OR = 3.03(2.54 - 3.52))、肺炎(OR = 2.76(2.23 - 3.30))和心脏病发作(OR = 2.03(1.52 - 2.53))。所有病因与长期(6 - 12个月后)MMD的关联均减弱或无显著性。肺炎、骨折、中风和其他住院情况与短期相对步速变化在 - 4.8%至 - 19.5%之间相关,且只有骨折与长期变化相关。肺炎、心脏病发作、中风和骨折的住院与老年人短期活动能力下降有关。急性住院后,老年人可能面临活动能力下降和残疾的风险,其程度由引发事件的原因决定。