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Journal Article

Citation

Runge M. Z. Gerontol. Geriatr. 1997; 30(4): 267-275.

Vernacular Title

Die multifaktorielle Pathogenese von Gehstorungen, Sturzen und Huftfrakturen im

Affiliation

Aerpah-Klinik Esslingen-Kennenburg, Esslingen. RungeEsslingen@t-online.de

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9410505

Abstract

Age, gait disorders, falls, and hip fractures are connected in a pathological cascade. 90% of hip fractures happen at the age of 70 and older; 90% are a consequence of a fall. Only a minority of these patients regain their former level of locomotion. For many of them a hip fracture ends in dependence on personal help, placement in a nursing home, or even death. About 80% of falls occur due to pathological balance and gait disorder and are not due to syncope or overwhelming external force. 5% of all falls result in a fracture, including 1% of all falls with hip fractures. What determines the fracture risk is the relation of bone fragility to geometrical and physical factors of the fall. Regarding the cascade gait disorder-fall-hip fracture, there are always multiple factors interacting. It is useful to give this distinct entity of multifactorial gait disorder with high risk of falling a new diagnostic label: We suggest "age-associated multifactorial gait disorder." To identify individual risk factors and regard their interactions can be a basis for therapy and interventions to prevent falls.


Language: de

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