Risk of fall-related injury in people with lower limb amputations: A prospective cohort study.

Authors

  • Christopher Kevin Wong
  • Stanford T. Chihuri
  • Guohua Li

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2042

Keywords:

balance and falls, injury, amputation, prostheses, prognosis, health status disparity.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess fall-related injury risk and risk factors in people with lower limb amputation. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal cohort with follow-up every 6 months for up to 41 months. SUBJECTS: Community-dwelling adults with lower limb amputations of any etiology and level recruited from support groups and prosthetic clinics. METHODS: Demographic and clinical characteristics were obtained by self-reported questionnaire and telephone or in-person follow-up. Fall-related injury incidence requiring medical care per person-month and adjusted hazard ratio of fall-related injury were calculated using multivariable proportional hazards regression modeling. RESULTS: A total of 41 subjects, with 782 follow-up person-months in total, had 11 fall-related injury incidents (14.1/1,000 person-months). During follow-up, 56.1% of subjects reported falling and 26.8% reported fall-related injury. Multivariable proportional hazard modeling showed that women were nearly 6 times more likely as men to experience fall-related injury and people of non-white race were 13 times more likely than people of white race to experience fall-related injury. The final predictive model also included vascular amputation and age. CONCLUSION: Risk of fall-related injury requiring medical care in people with lower limb amputation appears to be higher than in older adult inpatients. Intervention programs to prevent fall-related injury in people with lower limb amputation should target women and racial minorities.

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Published

2015-12-22

How to Cite

Kevin Wong, C., Chihuri, S. T., & Li, G. (2015). Risk of fall-related injury in people with lower limb amputations: A prospective cohort study. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 48(1), 80–85. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2042

Issue

Section

Original Report