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Am J Phys Med Rehabil · May 2015
Concomitant upper limb fractures and short-term functional recovery in hip fracture patients: does the site of upper limb injury matter?
- Marco Di Monaco, Carlotta Castiglioni, Fulvia Vallero, Roberto Di Monaco, and Rosa Tappero.
- From the Osteoporosis Research Center and Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Presidio Sanitario San Camillo (MDM, CC, FV, RT); and Department of Social Science, University, Torino, Italy (RDM).
- Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2015 May 1;94(5):366-72.
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to evaluate functional recovery in a subgroup of hip fracture patients who sustained a simultaneous fracture at the upper limb, taking into account the site of upper limb injury.DesignOf 760 patients admitted consecutively to the authors' rehabilitation hospital because of a fall-related hip fracture, 700 were retrospectively investigated. Functional outcome was assessed using Barthel Index scores.ResultsIn 49 of the 700 patients, a single fall resulted in both a hip fracture and a fracture of either wrist (n = 34) or proximal humerus (n = 15). The patients with concomitant shoulder fractures had lower median Barthel Index scores after rehabilitation (70 vs. 90, P = 0.003), lower median Barthel Index effectiveness (57.1 vs. 76.9, P = 0.018), and prolonged median length of stay (42 vs. 36 days, P = 0.011) than did the patients with isolated hip fractures. Significant differences persisted after adjustment for six potential confounders. The adjusted odds ratio for achieving a Barthel Index score lower than 85 was 6.71 (95% confidence interval, 1.68-26.81; P = 0.007) for the patients with concomitant shoulder fractures. Conversely, no prognostic disadvantages were associated with concomitant wrist fractures.ConclusionsData show a worse functional recovery and a prolonged length of stay in the subgroup of hip fracture patients who sustained a concomitant fracture at the proximal humerus, but not at the wrist.
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