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Journal Article

Citation

McDermott C, Colón-Emeric C, Berry S. J. Am. Med. Assoc. JAMA 2024; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, American Medical Association)

DOI

10.1001/jama.2024.11827

PMID

39046714

Abstract

In Reply We appreciate the comments of Dr Strandberg and of Dr Jones and colleagues, who noted that our recent review1 did not address alcohol and postprandial hypotension, respectively, as potential risk factors for falls in older adults. They correctly highlight that the etiology of falls in older adults is inherently multifactorial, and for individual patients, both of these factors may be highly salient. Jones and colleagues reference a systematic review that described an association between syncope and postprandial hypotension in older adults2; however, a subsequent systematic review and meta-analysis reported an inconsistent relationship between postprandial hypotension and falls.3 A high prevalence of heavy alcohol use among those presenting with fall-related injuries has been noted across all ages, but the prevalence appears to be lower among older compared with younger cohorts,4 and evidence from other studies has failed to show an association between alcohol use and falls in older adults.5 This conflicting evidence is likely the reason why neither factor is commonly included as part of assessment recommendations in fall prevention guidelines. Additionally, these factors have not been systematically addressed in randomized trials of prevention strategies, which were the focus of our review.


Language: en

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