Statins and Hospitalizations from Recurrent Falls in the Elderly.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q3 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Gerontology Pub Date : 2025-09-02 DOI:10.1159/000548176
Zvi Shimoni, Erika Eva Kalaora, Vered Hermush, Paul Froom
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Statin-induced myopathy might increase the risk of falls in the elderly and change treatment decisions.

Methods: In the following retrospective study, we selected 463 internal medicine patients aged ≥70 years old hospitalized after a fall during 2020-2021. We compared those with and without an admission for a previous fall in the last 12 months. The primary predictors were polypharmacy (≥5 drugs or ≥9 drugs), antidiabetic drugs, psychiatric drugs, drugs for hypertension, and statins (types and dose). Secondary predictors included age, female gender, admission serum creatinine, albumin, and hemoglobin concentrations, smoking at present, the Norton scale, and if the statin was given for primary prevention (no cardiovascular diseases), the patient's ambulatory status, where and when the patient fell, and what the patient was doing when the fall took place. We calculated the odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for associations with recurrent versus single falls.

Results: There were 463 patients hospitalized after a fall. Their age was 84 ± 7 years, and 47.7% (221/463) were female. There were 19.0% (88/463) who had recurrent falls, 116 patients treated with atorvastatin (25.1%) and 98 treated with other statins (21.2%). The secondary variables were not significantly different in those with and without recurrent falls. There was a significant increase in odds for recurrent falls in those treated with atorvastatin (1.68, 1.01-2.81) and insulin (2.46, 1.23-4.95). Individually, the drugs were not associated with recurrent falls, but the combination of both drugs was associated with a 5.2 (2.1-13.2) increased odds of a recurrent fall.

Conclusions: The finding that the combined treatment with atorvastatin and insulin is associated with recurrent falls in elderly hospitalized patients is novel and warrants further research.

他汀类药物与老年人复发性跌倒的住院治疗。
他汀类药物引起的肌病可能增加老年人跌倒的风险,并改变治疗决策。方法:在以下回顾性研究中,我们选择了463例年龄≥70岁的2020-2021年住院的内科住院跌倒患者。我们比较了那些有和没有反复跌倒的人。次要预测因素包括年龄、女性性别、入院时血清肌酐、白蛋白和血红蛋白浓度、当前吸烟、诺顿评分以及他汀类药物是否用于一级预防。我们还比较了患者的活动状态,患者摔倒的地点和时间,以及患者摔倒时正在做什么。主要预测因素为他汀类药物、他汀类药物类型、糖尿病、口服降糖药和胰岛素、降压药、精神类药物、苯二氮卓类药物和多种药物(≥5种药物)。在单变量和多变量分析中,我们计算了复发性跌倒与单次跌倒之间的比值比和95%置信区间(OR, 95% CI)。结果:463例患者因跌倒住院。年龄84±7岁,女性占47.7%(221/463)。有19.0%(88/463)患者复发跌倒,阿托伐他汀治疗116例(25.1%),其他他汀类药物治疗98例(21.2%)。患者的年龄、性别、辛伐他汀治疗、入院实验室检查结果、门诊状态、诺顿评分以及患者跌倒的时间、地点和方式在有和没有复发跌倒的患者中没有显著差异。阿托伐他汀组(1.68,1.01-2.81)和胰岛素组(2.46,1.23-4.95)复发性跌倒的几率显著独立增加。结论:我们发现阿托伐他汀和胰岛素治疗与老年住院患者复发性跌倒之间存在独立关联。结果应该被认为是初步的,观察到的关联的进一步证据是有保证的。
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来源期刊
Gerontology
Gerontology 医学-老年医学
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: In view of the ever-increasing fraction of elderly people, understanding the mechanisms of aging and age-related diseases has become a matter of urgent necessity. ''Gerontology'', the oldest journal in the field, responds to this need by drawing topical contributions from multiple disciplines to support the fundamental goals of extending active life and enhancing its quality. The range of papers is classified into four sections. In the Clinical Section, the aetiology, pathogenesis, prevention and treatment of agerelated diseases are discussed from a gerontological rather than a geriatric viewpoint. The Experimental Section contains up-to-date contributions from basic gerontological research. Papers dealing with behavioural development and related topics are placed in the Behavioural Science Section. Basic aspects of regeneration in different experimental biological systems as well as in the context of medical applications are dealt with in a special section that also contains information on technological advances for the elderly. Providing a primary source of high-quality papers covering all aspects of aging in humans and animals, ''Gerontology'' serves as an ideal information tool for all readers interested in the topic of aging from a broad perspective.
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