Publication | Closed Access
Ambulatory ability after hip fracture. A prospective study in geriatric patients.
263
Citations
0
References
1995
Year
Geriatric MedicineOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryHip FractureLogistic AnalysisSkeletal TraumaPrehabilitationOrthopaedicsGeriatric Fracture CareJoint ReplacementSurgical OutcomesMinimum FollowupGeriatricsOutcomes ResearchRehabilitationGeriatric PatientsGeriatric SpineFracture TypeSpinal FractureGeriatric Physical TherapyMedicineAmbulatory Ability
Three hundred thirty-six community-dwelling, previously ambulatory, geriatric patients with hip fracture were observed prospectively to determine ambulatory ability at a minimum followup of 1 year. One hundred thirty-seven (41%) patients maintained their prefracture ambulatory ability at a minimum followup of 1 year; 134 (40%) patients remained ambulatory but became more dependent on assistive devices; 39 (12%) previous community ambulators became household ambulators, and 26 (8%) patients became nonfunctional ambulators. Analysis was performed to determine which pre- and postinjury factors were predictive of failure to recover ambulatory capacity 1 year after fracture. Potential predictor variables analyzed included age, gender, number of comorbid conditions, prefracture ambulatory ability, prefracture living situation, fracture type, American Society of Anesthesiologists rating of operative risk, type of surgery, and number of postoperative complications. Multiple logistic regression analysis identified significant contributions of age, prefracture ambulatory ability, American Society of Anesthesiologists rating of operative risk, and fracture type to ambulatory recovery.