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Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease

Our retrospective study of falls and resultant trauma in consecutive Parkinson disease (PD) patients seen in one year at the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Clinic found that multiple-fallers could be divided into patients who fell mainly when walking or those who fell mainly when standing. Patients who fell...

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Autores principales: Lieberman, Abraham, Deep, Aman, Olson, Markey C, Smith Hussain, Victoria, Frames, Christopher W, McCauley, Margaret, Lockhart, Thurmon E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6777936/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31598436
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.5329
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author Lieberman, Abraham
Deep, Aman
Olson, Markey C
Smith Hussain, Victoria
Frames, Christopher W
McCauley, Margaret
Lockhart, Thurmon E
author_facet Lieberman, Abraham
Deep, Aman
Olson, Markey C
Smith Hussain, Victoria
Frames, Christopher W
McCauley, Margaret
Lockhart, Thurmon E
author_sort Lieberman, Abraham
collection PubMed
description Our retrospective study of falls and resultant trauma in consecutive Parkinson disease (PD) patients seen in one year at the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Clinic found that multiple-fallers could be divided into patients who fell mainly when walking or those who fell mainly when standing. Patients who fell when walking were more likely to visit an emergency room or be admitted to a hospital. Of 455 consecutive patients who were evaluated over a one-year period, 51 were excluded because they had atypical Parkinson disorders, had multiple risk factors for falling, or were demented. Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scales and Zeno Walkway results were compared among non-fallers, single-fallers, and multiple-fallers. Among multiple-fallers, comparisons were made between patients who fell mainly when standing and those who fell mainly when walking. Most patients (197, 49%) did not fall, 142 (35%) fell once, and 65 (16%) fell more than once. Multiple-fallers differed significantly from single-fallers and non-fallers: they had PD significantly longer (p<0.001), were more severely affected (p<0.001), and took shorter steps (p<0.001). Of 65 multiple-fallers, 26 (40%) fell mainly when standing, 28 (43%) fell mainly when walking, and 11 (17%) fell equally often when standing or walking. Falls when walking resulted in more severe injuries. Patients who fell mainly when standing did not realize they could fall when standing; engaged in inappropriate weight shifting, bending, reaching, and multitasking; and failed to use their assistive devices. Such patients would benefit from being counseled about falling when standing. Patients who fell mainly when walking were aware they could fall, despite using an assisted device, and were more likely to have freezing of gait (FOG). They were more likely to sustain a severe injury, and were more likely to be admitted to an emergency room or hospital. Such patients would benefit from reducing, if possible, FOG.
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spelling pubmed-67779362019-10-09 Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease Lieberman, Abraham Deep, Aman Olson, Markey C Smith Hussain, Victoria Frames, Christopher W McCauley, Margaret Lockhart, Thurmon E Cureus Neurology Our retrospective study of falls and resultant trauma in consecutive Parkinson disease (PD) patients seen in one year at the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Clinic found that multiple-fallers could be divided into patients who fell mainly when walking or those who fell mainly when standing. Patients who fell when walking were more likely to visit an emergency room or be admitted to a hospital. Of 455 consecutive patients who were evaluated over a one-year period, 51 were excluded because they had atypical Parkinson disorders, had multiple risk factors for falling, or were demented. Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scales and Zeno Walkway results were compared among non-fallers, single-fallers, and multiple-fallers. Among multiple-fallers, comparisons were made between patients who fell mainly when standing and those who fell mainly when walking. Most patients (197, 49%) did not fall, 142 (35%) fell once, and 65 (16%) fell more than once. Multiple-fallers differed significantly from single-fallers and non-fallers: they had PD significantly longer (p<0.001), were more severely affected (p<0.001), and took shorter steps (p<0.001). Of 65 multiple-fallers, 26 (40%) fell mainly when standing, 28 (43%) fell mainly when walking, and 11 (17%) fell equally often when standing or walking. Falls when walking resulted in more severe injuries. Patients who fell mainly when standing did not realize they could fall when standing; engaged in inappropriate weight shifting, bending, reaching, and multitasking; and failed to use their assistive devices. Such patients would benefit from being counseled about falling when standing. Patients who fell mainly when walking were aware they could fall, despite using an assisted device, and were more likely to have freezing of gait (FOG). They were more likely to sustain a severe injury, and were more likely to be admitted to an emergency room or hospital. Such patients would benefit from reducing, if possible, FOG. Cureus 2019-08-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6777936/ /pubmed/31598436 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.5329 Text en Copyright © 2019, Lieberman et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neurology
Lieberman, Abraham
Deep, Aman
Olson, Markey C
Smith Hussain, Victoria
Frames, Christopher W
McCauley, Margaret
Lockhart, Thurmon E
Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease
title Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease
title_full Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease
title_fullStr Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease
title_full_unstemmed Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease
title_short Falls When Standing, Falls When Walking: Different Mechanisms, Different Outcomes in Parkinson Disease
title_sort falls when standing, falls when walking: different mechanisms, different outcomes in parkinson disease
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6777936/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31598436
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.5329
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