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Circunstâncias e consequências de quedas em idosos com vestibulopatia crônica

TLDR
Fear and tendency to fall are referred by the majority of chronically dizzy elderly and the number of falls is significantly associated with activity restrictions after the last fall and with the causes for falling (slipping and dizziness).
Abstract
AIM: To investigate the circumstances and consequences of falls in the chronically dizzy elderly and to correlate them with the number of falls (one/two and more). METHOD: Transversal descriptive analytic study with 64 patients aged 65 or over, with history of falls and diagnostic of chronic vestibular dysfunction. We performed a descriptive analysis and Qui-Square test (<0.05). RESULTS: The sample was constituted by a female majority (76.6%) with a mean age of 73.62±5.69 years. The vestibular examination showed peripheral vestibulopathy in 81.5% of the cases and the most prevalent diagnostic hypothesis were benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (43.8%) and metabolic inner ear disease (42.2%). Recurrent falls were seen in 35 elderly (53.1%). In relation to the last fall, 39.1% of the patients had fallen in their homes, 51.6% of them occurred during the morning, 51.6% with some propulsion mechanism, 53.1% when walking, 25.0% caused by dizziness and 23.4% by stumbling. Activity restriction was significantly greater in patients that have already had two and more falls, when compared with those who had fallen only once (p=0.031). We found a significant association between the number of falls and their causes (p<0.001). Falls that have happened by slipping were more frequent in the elderly that reported one fall (p=0.0265) and falls that had happened because of dizziness were more frequent in the elderly that complained of two or more falls (p=0.0012). CONCLUSION: Fear and tendency to fall are referred by the majority of chronically dizzy elderly. Fall are more frequent in the morning, in the home and during walking. The propulsion direction is mentioned by half of the elderly and the most common cause for falls are dizziness and stumbling. The number of falls is significantly associated with activity restrictions after the last fall and with the causes for falling (slipping and dizziness).

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Journal ArticleDOI

Disorders of Balance and Vestibular Function in US Adults: Data From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2001-2004

TL;DR: The prevalence of vestibular dysfunction among US adults, as measured by a simple postural metric, is common and significantly increases the likelihood of falls, which are among the most morbid and costly health conditions affecting older individuals.

Disorders of Balance and Vestibular Function in US Adults

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors determined the prevalence of vestibular dysfunction among US adults, evaluate differences by sociodemographic characteristics, and estimate the association between vestibule dysfunction and risk of falls.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elderly falls associated with benign paroxysmal positional vertigo

TL;DR: BPPV elderly patients had indeed a reduction on the number of falls after the particle repositioning maneuver (PRM), with statistically significant difference when all the patients were analyzed together.
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The neurobiology of falls

TL;DR: The role of motor impairment and particularly of those “mild parkinsonian signs” frequently detectable in elderly subjects, the role of executive and attentive resources when coping with obstacles, and the roles of vascular lesions in “highest level gait disorder” will lead to the development of specific therapeutic interventions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for falls among elderly persons living in the community.

TL;DR: It is concluded that falls among older persons living in the community are common and that a simple clinical assessment can identify the elderly persons who are at the greatest risk of falling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fear of falling and fall-related efficacy in relationship to functioning among community-living elders

TL;DR: The strong independent association between self-efficacy and function found in this study suggests that clinical programs in areas such as prevention, geriatric evaluation and management, and rehabilitation should attempt simultaneously to improve physical skills and confidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Circumstances and consequences of falls in independent community-dwelling older adults

TL;DR: Insight is provided into the circumstances and consequences of falls among independent community-dwelling older adults and some possible ways of preventing falls are suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fall-related factors in a cohort of elderly community residents

TL;DR: To identify factors associated to fall and recurrent fall episodes among elderly living in a community, and to determine the relative risk of each factor as a fall predictor, the Brazilian version of the Multidimensional Functional Assessment Questionnaire was used.
Journal Article

Falls in patients with vestibular deficits.

TL;DR: Falls are an important consequence of bilateral vestibular hypofunction, and patients should be counseled about the increased risk of falling.
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