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Journal Article

Citation

Hagino T, Ochiai S, Senga S, Yamashita T, Saito M, Wako M, Taniguchi N, Ando T, Haro H. Prog. Rehabil. Med. 2022; 7: e20220018.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, The Japanese Association of Rehabilitation Medicine)

DOI

10.2490/prm.20220018

PMID

35434403

PMCID

PMC8986820

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We investigated the clinical situation of fractures that occurred in patients in the severely disabled patients' ward of our hospital. The study aimed to identify risk factors for the occurrence of long bone fractures in the extremities, which pose problems in nursing care.

METHODS: We retrospectively studied fractures that occurred between April 2015 and March 2021 among a total of 126 patients in the severely disabled patients' ward of our hospital. The fracture site, frequency of occurrence, cause of injury, and other parameters were investigated. We statistically compared the fracture group and non-fracture group with respect to age, sex, body position before fracture, motor function, food intake status, body mass index, use of anti-epileptic drugs, hip dislocation, and maximum extension angle and range of motion of elbow/knee joints.

RESULTS: Among 126 patients, a total of 35 fractures occurred in 28 patients (22%). There were 19 long bone fractures of the extremities in 17 patients. Multiple logistic regression analysis using the occurrence of long bone fractures of the extremities as the objective variable identified the following significant independent variables: age [odds ratio (OR)=1.087, P=0.008], maximum extension angle of the elbow joint (OR=1.039, P=0.023), range of motion of the elbow joint (OR=0.940, P=0.003), and range of motion of the knee joint (OR=0.972, P=0.034).

CONCLUSIONS: This study reveals that older age and flexion contracture of elbow and knee joints are risk factors for the occurrence of long bone fractures in severely disabled patients.


Language: en

Keywords

risk factors; fracture; intellectual disabilities; motor disabilities

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