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Survey
suggests higher risk of falls due to
dizziness in Middle-aged and Older Americans
Newswise — A full third of American adults,
69 million men and women over age 40, are up
to 12 times more likely to have a serious
fall because they have some form of
inner-ear dysfunction that throws them off
balance and makes them dizzy, according to
Johns Hopkins experts.
Among the other key findings of the
three-year survey and study on the subject
by the Johns Hopkins team are that a third
of this group, or more than 22 million, were
unaware of their vulnerability, having had
no previous incidents of disequilibrium or
sudden falls to suggest that anything was
wrong.
In the survey, to be published in the
Archives of Internal Medicine online May 25,
these asymptomatic people were three times
more likely to suffer a potentially fatal
fall than people with a healthy sense of
balance, whereas people already experiencing
symptoms of imbalance had a 12-fold increase
in risk.
Accidental falls are among the leading
causes of death in the elderly, killing an
estimated 13,000 seniors each year in the
United States and resulting in more than one
and a half million visits to hospital
emergency rooms, experts say.
“Vestibular imbalances need to be taken
seriously because falls can be fatal and
injuries can be painful, lead to long
hospital stays and result in significant
loss in quality of life,” says Lloyd B.
Minor, M.D., the Andelot Professor and
director of otolaryngology – head and neck
surgery at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine.
Minor says that recent government reports
estimate that fatal falls in the elderly
cost the U.S. Medicare program nearly $1
billion in hospital charges, and those
injured with broken bones cost an additional
$19 billion.
More than 5,000 men and women over age 40
participated in the survey, which took three
years to complete and involved specialized
exams and balance testing to find out who
had vestibular dysfunction, its early signs
and symptoms, and who did not.
And the chance of having a balance problem,
survey results showed, increases with age
and diabetes.
Eighty-five percent of men and women over
age 80 had an imbalance problem, 23 times
more than people in their 40s.
And people with diabetes were 70 percent
more likely to suffer from vestibular
problems.
Researchers
say this is likely due to damage done by
high blood sugar levels to the hair cells in
the inner ear that facilitate balance
control and to the long-term damage from
diabetes to the inner ear’s small blood
vessels.
“Our survey shows that balance testing needs
to be part of basic primary care, and that
all physicians need to be monitoring and
screening their patients for vestibular
dysfunction so that we can take preventive
measures to guard against falling,” says
Minor.
Lead study investigator Yuri Agrawal, M.D.,
says one reason for the large numbers of
undiagnosed and untreated individuals is
that balance testing requires specialized
training and the tests take more time and
effort to perform than other diagnostic or
screening procedures.
As part of the new survey, study
participants were subjected to a half dozen
key tests of unsteadiness, including
physical exams.
Balance function was assessed by subjects’
ability to stand upright with and without
visual cues, such as being able to stand
upright while wearing a blindfold or with
their eyes closed, or by not having to use
their arms to maintain balance while
standing on a foam-padded mat.
“Now that we have identified the magnitude
of balance problems, primary care physicians
are more likely to be on the look out for
its early signs and symptoms, and more
attuned to when a patient needs to be
referred to a physical therapist,” Agrawal
says.
Minor points out that physical
rehabilitation exercises can aid people with
vestibular dysfunction.
Balancing and walking exercises can be used
to train the brain to compensate for
inner-ear deficits and episodes of
dizziness.
One such exercise has unsteady people
practice standing on one leg, while resting
the other leg on a Styrofoam cup and trying
not to crush it.
Another exercise has people turning their
head while walking.
Minor adds that people with vestibular
dysfunction can take preventive steps to
avoid falls in their homes, such as
installing guard rails along stairs or
hallways where a fall might occur, making
sure rooms are well lit, and removing
carpeting in places where people are more
prone to trip.
Agrawal says the team’s next steps are to
evaluate screening tools for identifying as
early as possible which people are at a
heightened risk of falling.
She also says other risk factors, such as
sleep patterns and nutrient deficiencies,
which may play a role in predicting risk of
falling, need further study.
Various
rehabilitation techniques should also be
examined to pinpoint which techniques work
best at preventing falls and, ultimately, to
allow people to live longer and healthier
lives.
Funding for this study was provided in part
by The Johns Hopkins Hospital. However, the
National Health and Nutrition Examination
Surveys are funded directly by the National
Institutes of Health.
In addition to Minor and Agrawal, other
researchers involved in this research,
conducted solely at Hopkins, were John
Carey, M.D.; Charles Della Santina, M.D.,
Ph.D.; and Michael Schubert, Ph.D., P.T.
For additional information, please go to:
The Johns Hopkins Center for Hearing and
Balance
http://ww2.jhu.edu/chb/
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