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Fall prediction in neurological gait disorders: differential contributions from clinical assessment, gait analysis, and daily-life mobility monitoring

Roman Schniepp, Anna Huppert, Julian Decker, Fabian Schenkel, Cornelia Schlick, Atal Rasoul, Marianne Dieterich, Thomas Brandt, Klaus Jahn, Max Wuehr

2021Journal of Neurology63 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the predictive validity of multimodal clinical assessment outcomes and quantitative measures of in- and off-laboratory mobility for fall-risk estimation in patients with different forms of neurological gait disorders. METHODS: The occurrence, severity, and consequences of falls were prospectively assessed for 6 months in 333 patients with early stage gait disorders due to vestibular, cerebellar, hypokinetic, vascular, functional, or other neurological diseases and 63 healthy controls. At inclusion, participants completed a comprehensive multimodal clinical and functional fall-risk assessment, an in-laboratory gait examination, and an inertial-sensor-based daily mobility monitoring for 14 days. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to identify explanatory characteristics for predicting the (1) the fall status (non-faller vs. faller), (2) the fall frequency (occasional vs. frequent falls), and (3) the fall severity (benign vs. injurious fall) of patients. RESULTS: 40% of patients experienced one or frequent falls and 21% severe fall-related injuries during prospective fall assessment. Fall status and frequency could be reliably predicted (accuracy of 78 and 91%, respectively) primarily based on patients' retrospective fall status. Instrumented-based gait and mobility measures further improved prediction and provided independent, unique information for predicting the severity of fall-related consequences. INTERPRETATION: Falls- and fall-related injuries are a relevant health problem already in early stage neurological gait disorders. Multivariate regression analysis encourages a stepwise approach for fall assessment in these patients: fall history taking readily informs the clinician about patients' general fall risk. In patients at risk of falling, instrument-based measures of gait and mobility provide critical information on the likelihood of severe fall-related injuries.

Topics & Concepts

GaitPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedicineLogistic regressionPoison controlPhysical therapyNeurologyGait analysisInjury preventionStepwise regressionEmergency medicineInternal medicinePsychiatryBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionVestibular and auditory disordersCerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders