Title: Falls
1Falls Gait Disturbance in the Elderly
- ??.??. ???????? ?????????? MD FRCP (London)
- ???????????????????????????????
- ??????????????????????????
2??????????????????????????/???????????????????????
??????.?. 2551 ?????????????????????????
???????????
3??????????? 1
?????????? ??????????????
????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? 1 ????????????????? ??????????????????????????????????????????????? I A
4???????????????????????????
- RAMPS
- Reduced body reserve
- Atypical presentation
- Multiple pathology
- Polypharmacy
- Social adversity
5Geriatric Giants - atypical presentation
- Instability (Fall)
- Immobility
- Intellectual impairment
- Incontinence
- Inappetite
- Insomnia
- Iatrogenesis
Big Is
6Pathophysiology of geriatric syndrome
Symptoms - weakness - fatigue - anorexia -
undernutrition - weight loss Signs - physiologic
changes - balance gait -deconditioning
- 1.Decline in physiologic
- function reserve
- 2.Disease
- falls - injury - acute illness -
hospitalization - disability - dependency - death
7??????????????????????????????????
- Prevalence in the community 20.
- Annual figure 279-387 cases per 1000 older
population. - The prevalence during the past 6 months 24.1
(women) and 12.1(men) - Prevalence of fracture of neck of femur 2.23
times more common among the Thai female elderly
than the Thai male elderly.
8??????????????????????????????????
- The higher the people aged, the more often will
fall. - Only 50 hospitalized elderly will survive 1 year
later!! - Fall accounts for 2/3 of accidental death.
- Fall-related death rises rapidly with increasing
age for aged gt 75.
9Physical injury
- Soft tissue raised creatine phosphokinase
- Fracture 3-5 esp. body of vertebrae, neck of
femur, distal end of radius(Collesfracture) - Burn
- Hypothermia live alone all night
- Central cord lesion on top of cervical
spondylosis - Subdural hematoma even trivial injury
10Pathogenesis
Low peak bone mass
Low BMD
Ageing
High bone loss
Fracture
Menopause
Fall Trauma
Secondary causes
11Psychological injury
- delirium
- loss of confidence
- anxiety
- depression
12Social injury
- carers anxiety
- increased demand of social support
- need safer environment
13??????????????????????
- Homeostatic control of posture
- Sensory inputs
- Vision
- Proprioceptive sense mechanoreceptor
- Vestibular function moving head
- Central information processing
- cerebrum, cerebellum, basal ganglia, brain stem
- Muscular activity
14CAUSES of FALLS
- 1.Insufficient lighting 1.Orthostatic
hypotension - 2.Unfamiliar surroundings 2.Circulatory
disorders - 3.Slippery floor 3.Neurological
diseases - 4.Objects in awkward 4.Musculo-skeletal
disease - places 5.Acute illness
-
EXTRINSIC
INTRINSIC
15??????????????????????????????????????????????????
- Orthostatic Hypotension
- -Low cardiac output
- Volume depletion diuretics, potent
vasodilators, prolonged bed rest, impaired
venous return - ANS dysfunction DM, Parkinsons
disease - -Drug-induced antihypertensives,
- antipsychotics, sedatives,
hypoglycemics, - alcohol, tricyclic antidepressants
16??????????????????????????????????????????????????
- Circulatory system diseases
- Vasomotor syncope micturition, defecation, cough
- Arrhythmias
- Myocardial ischemia / infarction esp. silent MI
- Valvular heart disease aortic stenosis
17??????????????????????????????????????????????????
- Neurological diseases
- -Stroke / TIA both anterior and posterior
circulations - -Cerebellar disease
- -Parkinsons disease
- -Seizure
- -Vestibular disease
- -Peripheral nervous system disease peripheral
neuropathy, cervical / lumbar spondylosis
18??????????????????????????????????????????????????
- Vision
- Cataract
- Macular degeneration
- Presbyopia
- Inappropriate spectacles
- Adverse drug reaction
- Benzodiazepine
- - chlormethiazole, lormetazepam, temazepam,
midazolam, Iorazepam, - - nitrazepam, flurazepam, flunitrazepam,
diazepam, - nordazepam
19??????????????????????????????????????????????????
- Acute illness Final Straw Syndrome
?????????????? - Infection UTI, pneumonia
- Hypoxemia CHF, PTE
- Musculoskeletal arthritis, muscle wasting,
proximal myopathy - Chiropody corn, in-growing toe nail, bunion
- Metabolic hypo/hyperglycemia, acute renal
failure - Electrolyte imbalance hyponatremia
20??????????????????????????????????????????????????
- Psychological disorders
- Dementia
- Depression
- Phobia
- Secondary gain
21??????????????????????????????????????
- Complete and thorough examination
- - Degree of injury
- - Physiologic aging changes
- - Precipitating factors
- Some special tests
- - Get-up-and-go test
- - Rombergs sign with slight push rollator
22Innovation in Get-up-and-go-test
- Timed get-up-and-go test
- sit, stand from arm-chair, walk 3 meters,
turn, walk back to chair and sit down - one trial run before timed test
- Categorical scale scoring
- lt 10 sec. freely mobile
- lt 20 sec. mostly independent
- 20-29 sec. variable mobility
- gt 29 sec. impaired mobility
-
23?????????????????????????????
- Aging changes
- Slow velocity no sexual differences at the same
body weight and height - - Weak knee extensor, ankle plantar flexors
- - Range of motion of hip, knee, ankle joints
- - Type of footwear
- - Nature of walking surface
- - Shortened step and stride length longer time
spent in the stable phase of double support
24?????????????????????????????
- Frontal lobe gait (frontal ataxia or apraxia)
- Difficult gait initiation and sway, wide-based,
flexed posture, small shuffling, hesitant step - Magnetic gait, slipping clutch syndrome
- DDx Alzheimers disease, Vascular dementia, NPH
25?????????????????????????????
- Sensory Ataxic Gait
- Wide-based, foot stamping walk with high stepping
due to loss of proprioceptive input, constantly
observe the foot position - Rombergs sign positive
- DDx Thiamin deficiency, Subacute combined
degeneration of spinal cord, spinal cord
compression, diabetic neuropathy
26Cerebellar Ataxic Gait
- Wide-based, small irregular unsteady, staggering,
sudden lurching to either side, forward or
backward like being drunk - Abnormal tandem gait, en bloc turning
- Poor coordination proprioceptive, labyrinthine,
visual - DDx vestibular damage, stroke, chronic
alcoholism, progressive supranuclear palsy,
thiamin deficiency, hypothyroidism, drug
intoxication
27Spastic Gait
- Hemiplegia
- - Stiff, flexed hip, extended knee,
plantar-flexed foot - - Affected arm flexed elbow across abdomen,
impaired - arm swing, toe scraping or dragging across
the floor - - Visual neglect or hemianopia
- Paralegia (scissoring gait)
- - Cervical spondylitic myolopathy, Subacute
combined - degeneration of spinal cord, chronic cord
compression, - lacunar infarcts
28Steppage gait
- Lifting the feet hight off the ground due to foot
drop (pretibial, peroneal muscle weakness) - DDx (peroneal nerve injury)
- Lumbar disc herniation(L4, L5, S1),
- Sciatic nerve trauma, spondylolisthesis,
- spinal stenosis, spinal cord injury,
- bone fractures (leg, vertebrae),
- stroke, tumor, DM,
- prolonged pressure
29- Festinating Gait
- Symmetric rapid shuffling of feet, stooped
posture, flexed hip and knee - Centre of gravity shifted forward
- DDx Parkinsonism, vascular dementia,
hydrocephalus
30Podalgic Gait
- Foot disorders corns, calluses, in-growing toe
nails, bunion, atrophy of plantar pads - Loose or tight-fitting footwear
31Wadding Gait
- Duck or penguins walk
- Limb girdle muscle weakness, lateral trunk
movement away from the foot as it lifts - Difficulty climbing stair, getting up from
low-seated chair - DDx hypo/hyperthyroidism, polymyositis,
osteomalacia, proximal myopathy
32Multisensory Deficit Gait
- Concurrent visual and proprioceptive impairment,
vestibular dysfunction - Dizzy, lightheadedness when walk or turn around,
using canes or touch walls or other furnishings - DM
- Antalgic Gonalgic Gait
- Painful hip and knee conditions, reluctant to
place weight on the affected limb, avoid heel
strike and push-off, less knee extension during
gait
33????????????????????????????????????????????
- Assess and treat physical injury
- Treat underlying conditions
- Physical therapy and education gait retraining,
muscle strengthening, aids to ambulation, proper
shoes, adaptive behaviour - Alter the environment
- - safe and proper-size furniture, no obstacles on
the floor, slippery or uneven floor, lighting,
rails(stairs, bathroom) - Social support
34Fall__Is it preventable ?
- Yes, but not all.
- 2 kinds of fallers
- spontaneous fall
- primary prevention health promotion
- secondary prevention risk factors
- accidental fall
35Accidental fall__environment
- ?????????????????????????????????????????
?????????????????????????????? - ???????????????????????????????????????????????
????????????????????????????????????????????????
??????????????? - ???????? ??????? ?????????????????????????
?????????????? - ??????????????? ???????????????
???????????????????? - ?????????????????????????????????????????????????
?????? ???????????????????????????????????????????
???????? ??????????????????? ????????????????????
??????????????? ???????? - ???????????????????????????????????
???????????????????????
36- ???? ?
- ???? ??? ?????? ?? ? ???????????????
- ? ??????? ????
- ???????????????????????????????????????
- ?????????????????????????? ????????
- ?.?. ????
37- ??? ?? ??????????? ? ?????????????????????????????
??????????? ????????????????????????????? ? ????
??????????????? ??????????? - (?) ??????????????????????????? ?,??? ?????????
- (?) ??????????????????????????????? ?,???
????????? - (?) ????????????????????? ????????????????????????
????????? ? (?) - (?) ????????????????? ??? ?????????
??????????????????????????????????????????????? - ????????????????????????? ??? ?????????
?????????????????????????????? ?? - ?????????????????????????????????????????
????????????????????????????? ?? ????????? - (?) ?????????????????????????????????????
- (?) ????????????????????????????????
- (?) ???????????????? ??????? ?????????????????????
????????????????????????? - ????????????????????????????? ????????????????????
?????????????????????????? - ???????????????????
38Strategy of fall prevention among Thais
- 1043 elderly subjects living in the urban area
around Siriraj Hospital Medical School, Bangkok. - 585 -- study group vs. 458 -- control group.
- A leaflet containing information on important
risk factors of fall within their community. In
addition, this particular group was allowed free
access to the geriatric clinic at Siriraj
Hospital if there was any health problem. - Followed up every 2 months for 1 year
39- The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of fall
P 0.012
40Take home message
- RAMPS
- The big Is
- Abnormal gait balance ? falls ? morbidity
mortality - Screening those at risk during clinical practice
- - Get-up-and-go test
- Consultation from orthopedic dept. preoperative
assessment search for causes of fall - Treat correct predisposing precipitating
factors - intrinsic extrinsic factors