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Study Finds Subclinical Cardiovascular Disease Associated With Higher Fall Risk

Findings informative for clinical discussions around primary prevention of CVD and fall interventions in older adults

Each year, one out of three US adults aged 65 years or older falls—and the number of deaths from falls is rising. Falls cost the US health system more than $23 billion in emergency department visits each year. Worse, they frequently contribute to serious injury in older adults, often resulting in persistent disability and premature death.

A study published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society identifies new factors that contribute to falls, which points towards interventions that may help prevent them. Researchers led by Stephen Juraschek, MD, PhD, a primary care physician at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center found that subclinical myocardial damage and cardiac wall strain are associated with a higher risk of falling in older adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD). These findings suggest that optimizing cardiovascular health even in older adults without a CVD diagnosis might represent a strategy for preventing falls among seniors.

“Given that falls can often be fatal for older adults, greater knowledge of the factors that contribute to falls represents a significant public health priority,” Juraschek says. “For the first time, our study shows that subclinical CVD is itself a fall risk factor. This raises the important question of whether treatment of subclinical CVD could help prevent falls among older adults.”

Juraschek and colleagues followed nearly 4,000 older adults (average age of 75 years) for 4½ years. During this time, participants were asked to report any hospitalization, and their medical records as well as claims data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) were linked with their study information. Falls were identified from hospital discharge ICD-9 codes or CMS claims.

In this older-aged community dwelling population without known CVD, stroke, or heart failure, the researchers found that markers of subclinical myocardial damage and cardiac wall strain were strongly and independently associated with new falls. These findings suggest that biomarkers of cardiac damage and wall strain could be important risk factors for falls and may shed light on novel, independent pathways linking CVD to falls among older adults free of a history of clinical CVD.

“Our findings are informative for clinical discussions pertaining to both the primary prevention of CVD and fall interventions in older adults,” Juraschek says. “Whether treatment of subclinical CVD could help prevent falls among older adults is beyond the scope of the present study, but represents an important subject of subsequent fall prevention research. Such research has the potential to inform practitioners considering the risk and benefits of primary prevention treatments in older adults at risk for falls.”

In addition to Juraschek, coauthors include Elizabeth Selvin, PhD, MPH; Natalie Daya, MHS; Lawrence J. Appel, MD, MPH; Edgar R Miller III, MD, PhD; Kunihiro Matsushita, MD, PhD; and Erin D. Michos, MD, MHS, of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, as well as B. Gwen Windham, MD, MHS, of University of Mississippi Medical Center, and Christie M. Ballantyne, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine and Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart and Vascular Center.

Source: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center