Managing Falls Flashcards

1
Q

What key factors should you consider when assessing a patient who has had a fall? (4 W + 1 H)

A
  • Who?
  • When?
  • Where?
  • What? - before during and after
  • How?
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2
Q

What factors should you consider about when a fall occured?

A
  • Time of day
    • Night- could be a vision issue
    • Morning- arthritis makes you stiff in the morning
  • What where they doing at the time?
    • Were they looking up
    • Getting up from a chair/ bed?
    • Been to the toilet?
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3
Q

What does the ‘where’ of the fall tell you?

A
  • In the house/ at the shops. If at home:
    • which room?
    • any trip hazards?
    • flashing lights from tv?
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4
Q

What should you ask the patient about before they fell?

A
  • Any symptoms prior to the fall (light headedness/ dizziness)
  • Chest pain
  • Did they trip or slip?
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5
Q

What should you ask the patient about during the fell?

A
  • Was there loss of conciousness?
  • Any incontinence, tongue biting, shaking
  • Any injuries?
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6
Q

What should you ask the patient about after they fell?

A
  • Did they regain conciousness quickly
  • Were they able to get up without help?
  • Any confusion or neurological symptoms?
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7
Q

What should you ask in the ‘how’ of assessing falls?

A
  • How long where they on the floor?
  • How many times have they fallen
  • How many in the last 6 months?
  • Any serious injuries?
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8
Q

What is syncope?

A

The transient loss of conciousness characterised by fast onset and spontaneous recovery

Caused by reduced perfusion pressure to the brain

Usually self limiting - being horizontal will fix low blood pressure

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9
Q

What symptoms might you experience preceding a syncopal episode?

A
  • Light headedness
  • Sweating
  • Pallow
  • Blurred vision/ wavy lines
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10
Q

Explain what happens in reflex syncope?

A
  • Disorder of the autonomic regulation of postural tone
  • Activation of part of the medulla leads to a decreased sympathetic output and an increased parasympathetic
  • Leads to a fall in CO and BP leading to reduced cerebral perfusion
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11
Q

Give some examples of reflex syncope

A
  • Vasovagal- simple faint from prolonged standing, stress, sight of blood, pain
  • Situational syncope e.g. coughing, straining, weight lifting
  • Carotid sinus massage
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12
Q

What is orthostatic hypotension?

A
  • Hypotension tht occurs after standing from a sitting, or lying postion
  • Can cause syncope of drop in blood pressure is severe enough
  • Normally a drop of 20mmHg of systolic BP, with pre-syncopal symptoms on standing
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13
Q

Explain how standing can cause syncope

A
  • Standing causes 500-800ml of blood to pool in the legs
  • Reduces end diastolic volume
  • Reduces cardiac stretch → reduces SV and CO
  • This is normally manahges by baroreceptor reflex
  • If this fails → syncope
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14
Q

Explain the baroreceptor reflex to a drop in arterial blood pressure

A
  • Baroreceptors located in the aortic arch and carotid bodies detect reduced CO and signal to medulla
  • Causes increased HR, SV and vasoconstriction to maintain cerebral perfusion
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15
Q

Why does the baroreceptor response fail with age?

A
  • Baroreceptors become less sensitive with age
  • Becomes less sensitive with hypertension
  • Medication (anti-hypertensives) can impair response
  • Altered by dehyrdration - many elderly dehydrated
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16
Q

What is cardiac syncope?

A

Syncope caused by cardiac disease or abnormality, either electrical (rhythm) or structural)

Electrical:

  • Bradycardia
  • Tachycardia

Structural:

  • Aortic stenosis
  • Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy

Coronary:

  • MI/ IHD
17
Q

Explain how aortic stenosis can cause syncope

A
  • Narrowing of the aortic valve
  • Harder to push blood through the valve
  • Heart has to work harder e.g. exercise can fail to adequately perfuse the brain
  • If patient has aortic stenosis with syncope - mean survival is 2-5 years untreated
  • Heart as an ejection systolic murmor
18
Q

What are some of the red flag features of cardiac syncope?

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

What social history should you ask when assessing whether a patient whos had a fall is fit for discharge?

A
  • Who do they live with
  • Do they have any felp at home?
  • Any family close by?
  • Any stairs?
  • Any walking aids?
  • Do they drink alcohol?
  • Do they smoke cigarettes?
20
Q

What type of walker/walking aid is not reccomended by occupational? health

A

A wheeled walker

A zimmer frame or something with sturdier base is much better

21
Q

How do you assess a patient who has a had a fall?

A
  • Don’t just examine where it hurts
  • Palpate all bony prominences
  • Do a full neurovascular, cranial nerve, CVS and respiratory examination
22
Q

What investigations can you do on someone who has had a fall?

A
  • Long standing blood pressure
  • ECG
  • FBC and U&Es
  • CK if they’ve had a long lie on floor

Guided on symptoms:

  • X-ray
  • Echo
  • 24 hr tape
  • CT
23
Q

What is one of the dangerous side effects of having a fall and being on the floor for a long time

A

Rhabdomyolysis

24
Q

What is rhabdomyolysis?

A
  • Any traumatic or medical injury to the sarcolemma
  • Releases of intracellular ions, myoglobing, CK and urates into the circulation
  • Can lead to electrolyte disturbance, (DIC) disseminated intravascular coagulation, renal failure, multi organ failure
25
Q

How do you diagnose rhabdomyolysis?

A

Creatinine Kinase is x5 upper limit of normal

26
Q

What risk factors after a fall would prompt you do perform a CT scan?

A
  • Age >65 years
  • History of bleeding or clotting disorder
  • Dangerous mechanism of injury
  • More than 30 minutes retrograde amnesia of events immediately before the head injury