Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study

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Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study. / Mänty, Minna Regina; Heinonen, A; Viljanen, A; Pajala, S; Koskenvuo, M; Kaprio, J; Rantanen, Taina.

I: Osteoporosis International, Bind 21, Nr. 4, 2010, s. 689-93.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Mänty, MR, Heinonen, A, Viljanen, A, Pajala, S, Koskenvuo, M, Kaprio, J & Rantanen, T 2010, 'Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study', Osteoporosis International, bind 21, nr. 4, s. 689-93. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00198-009-0950-x

APA

Mänty, M. R., Heinonen, A., Viljanen, A., Pajala, S., Koskenvuo, M., Kaprio, J., & Rantanen, T. (2010). Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study. Osteoporosis International, 21(4), 689-93. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00198-009-0950-x

Vancouver

Mänty MR, Heinonen A, Viljanen A, Pajala S, Koskenvuo M, Kaprio J o.a. Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study. Osteoporosis International. 2010;21(4):689-93. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00198-009-0950-x

Author

Mänty, Minna Regina ; Heinonen, A ; Viljanen, A ; Pajala, S ; Koskenvuo, M ; Kaprio, J ; Rantanen, Taina. / Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study. I: Osteoporosis International. 2010 ; Bind 21, Nr. 4. s. 689-93.

Bibtex

@article{11f2c7c0f23b11dfb6d2000ea68e967b,
title = "Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study",
abstract = "We studied if self-reported preclinical mobility limitation, described as modification of task performance without perception of difficulty, predicts future falls in older women with and without fall history. Our results suggest that combined measure of self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history may offer one possibility for inexpensive fall-risk evaluation in clinical practice. INTRODUCTION: We studied if self-reported preclinical mobility limitation predicts future falls in older women with and without fall history. METHODS: The study population consisted of 428 community-living 63-76-year-old women. At baseline, those who expressed no difficulty walking 2 km but reported that it took longer than before or that they did it less often were categorized as having preclinical mobility limitation. Those reporting difficulty in 2-km walk were categorized as having manifest mobility limitation. Fall history was recalled for previous 12 months and dichotomized. The incidence of future falls over 12 months was followed up with fall calendars. RESULTS: During the fall follow-up, a total of 440 falls were reported by 201 participants. Among those with fall history, women with preclinical mobility limitation had almost 4-fold (incidence rate ratios 3.77; 95% CI 1.02-13.92) and those with manifest mobility limitation almost 15-fold (14.66; 2.72-79.00) adjusted risk for future falls compared to those with no mobility limitation and no previous falls. Among women without fall history, preclinical and manifest mobility limitation did not predict future falls nor did fall history without mobility limitation. CONCLUSIONS: Already, early signs of mobility decline with history of falls increase the risk of further falls and should be considered as indications for fall prevention interventions.",
author = "M{\"a}nty, {Minna Regina} and A Heinonen and A Viljanen and S Pajala and M Koskenvuo and J Kaprio and Taina Rantanen",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1007/s00198-009-0950-x",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "689--93",
journal = "Osteoporosis International",
issn = "0937-941X",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history as predictors of future falls in older women: prospective cohort study

AU - Mänty, Minna Regina

AU - Heinonen, A

AU - Viljanen, A

AU - Pajala, S

AU - Koskenvuo, M

AU - Kaprio, J

AU - Rantanen, Taina

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - We studied if self-reported preclinical mobility limitation, described as modification of task performance without perception of difficulty, predicts future falls in older women with and without fall history. Our results suggest that combined measure of self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history may offer one possibility for inexpensive fall-risk evaluation in clinical practice. INTRODUCTION: We studied if self-reported preclinical mobility limitation predicts future falls in older women with and without fall history. METHODS: The study population consisted of 428 community-living 63-76-year-old women. At baseline, those who expressed no difficulty walking 2 km but reported that it took longer than before or that they did it less often were categorized as having preclinical mobility limitation. Those reporting difficulty in 2-km walk were categorized as having manifest mobility limitation. Fall history was recalled for previous 12 months and dichotomized. The incidence of future falls over 12 months was followed up with fall calendars. RESULTS: During the fall follow-up, a total of 440 falls were reported by 201 participants. Among those with fall history, women with preclinical mobility limitation had almost 4-fold (incidence rate ratios 3.77; 95% CI 1.02-13.92) and those with manifest mobility limitation almost 15-fold (14.66; 2.72-79.00) adjusted risk for future falls compared to those with no mobility limitation and no previous falls. Among women without fall history, preclinical and manifest mobility limitation did not predict future falls nor did fall history without mobility limitation. CONCLUSIONS: Already, early signs of mobility decline with history of falls increase the risk of further falls and should be considered as indications for fall prevention interventions.

AB - We studied if self-reported preclinical mobility limitation, described as modification of task performance without perception of difficulty, predicts future falls in older women with and without fall history. Our results suggest that combined measure of self-reported preclinical mobility limitation and fall history may offer one possibility for inexpensive fall-risk evaluation in clinical practice. INTRODUCTION: We studied if self-reported preclinical mobility limitation predicts future falls in older women with and without fall history. METHODS: The study population consisted of 428 community-living 63-76-year-old women. At baseline, those who expressed no difficulty walking 2 km but reported that it took longer than before or that they did it less often were categorized as having preclinical mobility limitation. Those reporting difficulty in 2-km walk were categorized as having manifest mobility limitation. Fall history was recalled for previous 12 months and dichotomized. The incidence of future falls over 12 months was followed up with fall calendars. RESULTS: During the fall follow-up, a total of 440 falls were reported by 201 participants. Among those with fall history, women with preclinical mobility limitation had almost 4-fold (incidence rate ratios 3.77; 95% CI 1.02-13.92) and those with manifest mobility limitation almost 15-fold (14.66; 2.72-79.00) adjusted risk for future falls compared to those with no mobility limitation and no previous falls. Among women without fall history, preclinical and manifest mobility limitation did not predict future falls nor did fall history without mobility limitation. CONCLUSIONS: Already, early signs of mobility decline with history of falls increase the risk of further falls and should be considered as indications for fall prevention interventions.

U2 - 10.1007/s00198-009-0950-x

DO - 10.1007/s00198-009-0950-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19415371

VL - 21

SP - 689

EP - 693

JO - Osteoporosis International

JF - Osteoporosis International

SN - 0937-941X

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 23207251