2 - Managing Falls Flashcards
What are some of the common causes of falls in older people?
Syncopal or Non-Syncopal (INTRINSIC OR EXTRINSIC)
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- Trips on hazards
- Diabetes
- OA
- Stroke
- UTI
- Aortic stenosis
- Vasovagal episode
- Ruptured AAA
- Post micturition syncope
- Postural hypertension
- Hip OA
- Dehydration
- GBS
What questions do you need to ask in a history of a present complaint if someone presents with a fall?
Who? - Did anyone see so can take collateral history
When? - Night/Vision, did they get up out of a chair or go to the toilet
Where? - Home, shops, any trip hazards or flashing lights from TV
What? - Before, During, After
How? - How long on the floor for rhabdomyolysis, how many times before and in last 6 months, any serious injuries
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What questions do you need to answer in the WHAT section of taking a history for a fall?
COLLATERAL HISTORY IMPORTANT
Before:
- Any symptoms before like lightheadedness?
- Chest pain?
- Trip?
During:
- Loss of consciousness?
- Incontinence, tongue biting, shaking, pale?
- Any injuries
After:
- Did they regain consciousness quickly?
- Could they get up without help?
- Any confusion or neurological symptoms?
What are the most common causes for loss of consciousness?
Syncope
Seizures
What is syncope and what are the symptoms of pre-syncope?
Transient loss of consciousness characterised by fast onset and spontaneous recovery due to reduced perfusion pressure in the brain. It is self limiting
- Light headedness
- Sweating
- Pallor
- Blurred vision
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Why is it important to think about a seizure in an elderly patient if they have had loss of consciousness during a fall?
- Lots of new epilepsy diagnoses present at older age
- Seizures can be really subtle, e.g a twitch, so ask collateral if any abnormal movements
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What are the three main categories of the causes of syncope?
- Reflex syncope
- Orthostatic hypertension
- Cardiac/Cardiopulmonary Disease
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What is reflex syncope and some examples of this?
Brief loss of consciousness due to a neurologically induced drop in blood pressure as there is a drop in sympathetic innervation so heart rate goes down and so does cardiac output and blood pressure
- Vasovagal: prolonged standing, stress etc
- Situational: coughing, straining
- Carotid Sinus massage: tight collar
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What is the definition of orthostatic hypotension?
Decrease in systolic blood pressure of 20 mm Hg or a decrease in diastolic blood pressure of 10 mm Hg within three minutes of standing when compared with blood pressure from the sitting or supine position
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What is the pathophysiology behind orthostatic hypotension (postural) syncope? (baroreceptor reflex important)
- Standing up causes 500/800ml of blood to pool in legs
- Decrease in EDV and therefore CO and therefore BP
- Baroreceptors detect this and raise CO by increasing HR and contractility
- If baroreceptor reflex fails there is not an increase in CO so syncope as loss of perfusion pressure
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What are some causes of baroreceptor reflex failure?
- Lose sensivity with age and hypertension
- Dehydration (so elderly need to drink regularly)
- Medications like antihypertensives
What are some causes of cardiac syncope?
DO ECG ON ANYONE PRESENTING WITH FALL
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Why does aortic stenosis lead to syncope and why does it need to be detected and treated quickly?
- Narrowing of the aortic valve so heart has to work harder so if exercising can fail to adequately perfuse brain
- Mean survival is 2-5 years if untreated
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What are some red flags in a patient’s history that would indicate their syncope is cardiac related?
- Exertional syncope
- Family history of cardiac disease or sudden cardiac death
- Preceding chest pain or palpatations
- PMH of heart disease, e.g ASD as a kid
- Abnormal ECG
What is the most common cause of a non-syncopal fall?
- Trips and slips
- Can be multifactoral e.g OA and diabetic nephropathy and tripping on hazard
- LOC following head trauma is still non-syncopal fall