Effect of a home-based exercise program on subsequent falls among community-dwelling older adults with cognitive frailty: A sub-group analysis of a randomized controlled trial.

Ryan S Falck, Chun Liang Hsu, Jennifer C Davis, Jordyn Rice, Elizabeth Dao, Larry Dian, Kenneth Madden, Dawn A Skelton, Naaz Parmar, Wendy L Cook, Karim M Khan, Teresa Liu-Ambrose
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Abstract

Objectives: Cognitive frailty is characterized by concurrent physical frailty and mild cognitive impairment and is associated with increased risk of falls. Exercise is an evidence-based strategy to prevent falls, but whether exercise reduces falls in people with cognitive frailty is unknown. We examined the effects of home-based exercise on subsequent falls among community-dwelling older adults with cognitive frailty who have previously fallen.

Study design: A sub-group analysis of a 12-month, single-blind, randomized controlled trial among 344 adults aged 70 years or more who had fallen within the past 12 months. Participants were randomized to either 12 months of home-based exercise (n=172) or usual care (n=172). In this sub-analysis, we included 192 participants with cognitive frailty (home-based exercise=93; usual care=99) with Short Physical Performance Battery scores ≤9/12 and Montreal Cognitive Assessment scores <26/30.

Main outcome measures: Our primary analysis examined the effect of exercise on self-reported falls rate over 12 months. Secondary analyses investigated the intervention's effects on scores on the Short Physical Performance Battery and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment. We also explored whether greater than or equal to mean average monthly adherence (i.e., ≥45.5%) moderated treatment effects.

Results: At 12 months, falls rates were 35% lower in the home-based exercise group compared with the usual care group (IRR=0.65; p=0.042). Score on the Short Physical Performance Battery significantly improved among home-based exercise participants with greater than or equal to mean adherence vs. those with less than mean adherence (estimated mean difference: 0.94; p=0.022).

Conclusions: Exercise is a promising strategy for reducing subsequent falls in people with cognitive frailty. Greater exercise adherence improved physical function in this population.

Clinicaltrials: gov identifier: NCT01029171.

居家锻炼计划对在社区居住的认知能力虚弱老年人随后跌倒的影响:随机对照试验的分组分析。
目的:认知功能虚弱的特征是同时存在身体虚弱和轻度认知功能障碍,并且与跌倒风险增加有关。运动是一种以证据为基础的预防跌倒策略,但运动是否能减少认知功能虚弱者的跌倒还不得而知。我们研究了居家锻炼对曾经跌倒过的社区老年人的影响:研究设计:对一项为期 12 个月的单盲随机对照试验进行了分组分析,试验对象为 344 名年龄在 70 岁或以上、在过去 12 个月内跌倒过的成年人。参与者被随机分配到为期 12 个月的家庭锻炼(172 人)或常规护理(172 人)中。在这项子分析中,我们纳入了 192 名认知功能虚弱的参与者(居家锻炼=93 人;常规护理=99 人),他们的短期体能测试评分≤9/12 分,蒙特利尔认知评估评分为主要结果指标:我们的主要分析考察了运动对 12 个月内自我报告的跌倒率的影响。次要分析调查了干预对短期体能测试和蒙特利尔认知评估得分的影响。我们还探讨了大于或等于平均每月坚持率(即≥45.5%)是否会调节治疗效果:12个月后,与常规护理组相比,家庭锻炼组的跌倒率降低了35%(IRR=0.65;P=0.042)。坚持运动大于或等于平均值的居家运动参与者与坚持运动小于平均值的参与者相比,在短期体能测试中的得分明显提高(估计平均差异:0.94;P=0.022):运动是减少认知功能虚弱者跌倒的有效策略。结论:运动是减少认知功能虚弱者继发跌倒的有效策略,提高运动依从性可改善该人群的身体功能:NCT01029171。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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