Medical School of Chinese PLA, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
Department of Cardiology, Second Medical Center, Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
BMC Geriatr. 2023 Oct 11;23(1):647. doi: 10.1186/s12877-023-04298-y.
With reduced balance and mobility, older patients with stroke are more susceptible to fear of falling (FOF). A maladaptive form of FOF can cause excessive activity restriction, poor balance, and recurrent falls, forming a self-reinforcing vicious cycle. This study applied and adapted the FOF model to investigate the interaction between FOF and fall risk in older stroke patients.
A cross-sectional study was conducted among 302 older stroke patients aged 60 and over. All participants were invited to complete the FOF, fall risk, physical activity, and balance tests, which were measured by the Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I), Self-Rated Fall Risk Questionnaire (FRQ), the long-form International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ-LF) and the Four-Stage Balance Test (FSBT) respectively. Data were analyzed using structural equation modeling.
The mean age of the respondents was 68.62 ± 7.62 years; 8.94% reported a high level of FOF, and 18.21% reported a moderate level of FOF. The structural equation model showed that FOF was directly associated with fall risk (β=-0.38, p < 0.001), and was indirectly associated with fall risk via physical activity (β=-0.075, p < 0.05) and balance ability (β=-0.123, p < 0.05). Depression (β=-0.47, p < 0.001), fall history (β=-0.13, p < 0.05), and female sex (β=-0.16, p < 0.05) affected FOF, while anxiety was not associated with FOF.
The increased risk of falling in older stroke patients results from a maladaptive FOF affected by depression, fall history, poor balance ability, and limited physical activity. Our results suggest that greater attention should be paid to FOF during stroke recovery and fall prevention. A multifaced intervention program encompassing physiological and psychological factors should be designed to address FOF and prevent falls.
由于平衡和活动能力下降,患有中风的老年患者更容易出现跌倒恐惧(FOF)。FOF 的一种适应不良形式会导致过度活动受限、平衡不良和反复跌倒,形成自我强化的恶性循环。本研究应用和改编了 FOF 模型,以研究 FOF 与老年中风患者跌倒风险之间的相互作用。
对 302 名年龄在 60 岁及以上的老年中风患者进行横断面研究。所有参与者均被邀请完成 FOF、跌倒风险、身体活动和平衡测试,分别由跌倒效能量表国际版(FES-I)、自我报告跌倒风险问卷(FRQ)、长版国际体力活动问卷(IPAQ-LF)和四阶段平衡测试(FSBT)测量。使用结构方程模型进行数据分析。
受访者的平均年龄为 68.62±7.62 岁;8.94%报告存在高水平的 FOF,18.21%报告存在中水平的 FOF。结构方程模型显示,FOF 与跌倒风险直接相关(β=-0.38,p<0.001),并通过身体活动(β=-0.075,p<0.05)和平衡能力(β=-0.123,p<0.05)间接与跌倒风险相关。抑郁(β=-0.47,p<0.001)、跌倒史(β=-0.13,p<0.05)和女性性别(β=-0.16,p<0.05)影响 FOF,而焦虑与 FOF 无关。
老年中风患者跌倒风险增加是由抑郁、跌倒史、平衡能力差和身体活动受限导致的适应不良 FOF 引起的。我们的研究结果表明,在中风康复和跌倒预防期间,应更加关注 FOF。应设计一个包含生理和心理因素的多方面干预计划来解决 FOF 问题并预防跌倒。