S2 L2 Managing falls Flashcards

1
Q

Why is it important to learn about falls?

A
  • Make up a huge amount of A and E attendances
  • 30% of over 65s and 50% of over 80s fall at least once year, some several times a week
  • Can lead to reduced quality of life, loss of confidence, and independence and ultimately mortality
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2
Q

What are the differential diagnosis for falls?

A

SO many!!!!
Helpful to use system approach
- Cardiovascular → arrhythmias, orthostatic hypotension, bradycardia, valvular heart disease
- Neurological → stroke, peripheral neuropathy
- Genitourinary → incontinence, urinary tract infection
- Endocrine → hypoglycaemia
- Musculoskeletal → arthritis, disuse atrophy
- ENT → BPPV, ear wax

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3
Q

What are the factors around falls?

A

Who?, When?, Where?, What?, How?
1- Who?
→Who was it?- do they remember much about it?
Did anyone witness? - if yes, get a collateral history
2- When?
→ What time of day/night?
- Low/ no light- visual problems? etc…
→What were they doing at the time?
- Were they looking up? - vertigo disorder
- Just got up from a chair/bed?- change body position, supine to upright?
- Just been to the toilet?
3- Where?
→ In the house? At the shops?
→ At home- which room? trip hazards? TV flashing light?
4- What? → Before, during, after
→Before- symptoms leading up to it? Chest pain? Did they trip or slip?
→ During- Loss of consciousness, incontinence, tongue biting, shaking, any injuries? etc…
→ After- what happened after? did they regain consciousness quickly? Were they able to get up quickly? were they able to get up without help? Any confusion or neurological symptoms?
5- How?
→ How long where they on the floor for? How many times has the patient fallen over before? How many in the last 6 months? Any serious injuries?

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4
Q

What is one of the most important things to try and establish from the history?

A

Establish the presence or absence of loss of consciousness leading to the falls

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5
Q

What is syncope?

A
  • Transient loss of consciousness characterised by fast onset and spontaneous recovery
  • Reduced perfusion pressure in the brain
  • Usually self limiting- being horizontal redistribute the blood- fix the low blood pressure
  • Beware of people who have been held in an upright position
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6
Q

What symptoms might a patient present with pre-syncope?

A

Light headedness
Sweating
Pallor
Blurred vision

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7
Q

What is another common reason for loss of consciousness in elderly patients?

A
Seizure
- Generalised tonic clonic seizure
New epilepsy in patients 
2nd peak of incidence in the over 80s 
Can be subtle
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8
Q

What are the different types of syncope?

A

Reflex syncope
Orthostatic (postural) hypotension
Cardiac/ cardiopulmonary disease

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9
Q

What is reflex syncope?

A
  • Fainting due to disorders of the autonomic regulation of postural tone
  • Activation of part of medulla leads to decrease in sympathetic output and increase in parasympathetic
  • Fall in CO (reduced HR) and BP leads to reduce cerebral perfusion
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10
Q

What are some examples of reflex syncope?

A

Vasovagal- simple faint- from prolonged standing, stress, sight of blood, pain
Situational syncope e.g. coughing, straining, lifting heavy weight
Carotid sinus massage

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11
Q

What is orthostatic hypotension?

A

Symptoms occur after standing from a sitting or lying position
Can cause syncope if drop in BP is severe enough
Normally defined as a drop of 20mmHg or more, with pre-syncopal symptoms on standing

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12
Q

What is the pathophysiology of orthostatic hypotension?

A
  • Standing- causes 500-800ml of blood to pool in the legs
  • Reduction in end diastolic volume
  • Reduced cardiac stretch, therefore reduced stroke volume and cardiac output
  • Normally managed by the baroreceptor reflex
  • If this fails then cerebral perfusion will drop and syncope occurs
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13
Q

Where are baroreceptors located?

A

In the carotid sinus - bifurcation of external and internal carotids
Aortic arch

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14
Q

What is the baroreceptor reflex?

A

Negative feedback system incorporating pressure sensors
Receptors respond to stretch in the arterial wall
- ↑BP → arterial walls stretch → ↑firing rate
- ↓BP → arterial wall decreased stretch → ↓firing rate
Carotid sinuses → Sinus nerve Hering (branch of glossopharyngeal CNIX) → synapse Nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) → Located in the brainstem
Arch aortic → aortic nerve combine vagus nerve CNX → NTS → modulates activity of sympathetic and parasympathetic (vagal) neurones in the medulla → regulate autonomic control of the heart and BV
- Sympathetic → ↑contractility, ↑HR, ↑Venous return

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15
Q

Why does this reflex fail?

A
  • Baroreceptor become less sensitive with age
  • Less sensitive with hypertension
  • Medications such as anti-hypertensives can impair this response
  • Dehydration
    Median and large arteries are less compliant unable to respond to changes
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16
Q

What is cardiac syncope?

A

Syncope caused by cardiac disease or abnormality
Can be an electrical (rhythm), structural or coronary cause
Electrical
- Bradycardia
- Tachycardia
Structural
- Aortic stenosis
- Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy
Coronary
- MI/ IHD

17
Q

How does an aortic stenosis lead to syncope?

A
  • Narrowing of aortic valve
  • Harder to push blood through the aortic valve
  • During exercise, when the heart has to work harder- the stenosis can limit the CO and therefore fail to adequately perfuse brain
  • If AS with syncope then patients have a mean survival of 2-5 years untreated
18
Q

What are the features of cardiac syncope?

A
  • Exertional syncope
  • Family history of cardiac disease or sudden cardiac death
  • Preceding chest pain or palpitation
  • Past medical history of heart disease
  • Abnormal ECG
19
Q

What are the non-syncopal falls?

A
  • Fall not caused by syncope e.g. trips and slips
  • End result of an intercurrent illness, such as an infection
  • Can still loose consciousness (LOC) from head injury/trauma when they are falling
20
Q

What is meant by multifactorial falls?

A

Many falls are a result of more than one thing

e.g. Chronic illness and infection on top

21
Q

What else needs to be considered before a patient can be discharged following a fall?

A

Drug history

Social history

22
Q

Why is it important to consider the drug history?

A

Polypharmacy→ medication might be interacting with each other - side effects
New medication? → might not be working for them? might be too much?
Anti-hypertensives/ anti-arrhythmias? → long term- maybe too strong
Any drug which may induce drowsiness? e.g. new analgesia, benzodiazepines, antidepressants, antipsychotics
Have they had a recent medication review?

23
Q

Why is it important to consider the social history of patient?

A

Is the patient capable of being safe on their own?
Do they have help at home?
Family close by?
Any stairs?
Any walking aids?- or other helpful household aids?
Do they drink alcohol?
Do they smoke cigarettes?

24
Q

Why do we need to consider walking aids?

A

Some of them, especially wheeled ones, move when the patient leans on them
If they are a bit unsteady on their feet then it can cause them to fall

25
Q

What examinations would you do on a patient that has fallen?

A

1% of falls result in fracture- don’t just stick to where patient says it hurts, do a full body scan
Full neurovascular, cranial nerve, CVS and respiratory examination at the absolute minimum

26
Q

What investigation do you order?

A
Lying and standing BP
ECG 
FBC and U and Es 
Creatine kinase if lying for a while 
X-ray 
Echo
24hr tape 
CT
27
Q

What is rhabdomyolysis?

A

Result from any traumatic or medical injury to the sarcolemma
Release of intracellular ions, myoglobin, CK and urates
Lead to electrolyte disturbances, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC- clotting all over the place), renal failure and multi organ failure
Indicated by Serum CK 5 times upper limit if normal

28
Q

How do you know whether to do a CT scan?

A
  • Glascocoma scale- how conscious someone is
  • Signs of skull fracture or seizure, neurological deficit or vomiting after head injury
    -Warfarin
    → Yes upset clotting risk of haemorrhage
    → No- memory loss or LOC after head injury
  • Risk factors
    → Age >65s
    → Hx of bleeding or clotting disorder
    → Dangerous mechanism of injury
    → More than 30 mins retrograde amnesia of events immediately before head injury
29
Q

What advice would you give to a patient?

A
  1. Basic environment - drink plenty, stand slowly, remove loose carpets, sensible slippers, good lighting
  2. OT assessment
  3. Social work/ primary care assessment e.g. GP- do they need increased help at home
  4. Opticians/ Audiologists if needed
  5. If in A&E - write complete GP letter- fully explain what happened, what you have thought about and considered etc… medication review if needed
30
Q

What classes of drugs can increase the likelihood of falls?

A
  • Beta blockers (bradycardia)
  • Diabetic medications (hypoglycaemia)
  • Antihypertensives (hypotension)
  • Benzodiazepines (sedation)
  • Antibiotics (intercurrent infection)
31
Q

What are risk factors for falls?

A

Environmental → obstacles,

Non-environmental → elderly, co-morbidities- parkinsons