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Fall events among people with stroke living in the community: Attention deficits, balance and falls (Proceedings of SRR)

Fall events among people with stroke living in the community: Attention deficits, balance and falls (Proceedings of SRR)
Fall events among people with stroke living in the community: Attention deficits, balance and falls (Proceedings of SRR)
PURPOSE: To describe levels of attention deficits among people with stroke living in the community and explore relationships between attention, balance, function and falls. METHOD: Forty-eight mobile community-dwelling people with stroke (30 men, 18 women, mean age 68.4 +/- 11.2) were recruited to this cross-sectional investigation through General Practitioners. Twenty-six participants had a right, 21 a left hemisphere infarction and one had a brain stem lesion; mean time since stroke was 46 months (range five to 204). Participants' were interviewed about fall-events; attention, balance and function were assessed using standardised tests. RESULTS: Visual inattention was identified in five participants (10%), deficits of sustained attention in 15 (31%), auditory selective attention in nine (19%), visual selective attention in 17 (35%) and divided attention deficits in 21 participants (43%). Sustained and divided attention scores correlated with balance, ADL ability and fall-status (p < 0.01). The balance and function of subjects with normal attention were better than those with abnormal scores (p < 0.01). Analysis of variance revealed differences between repeat-fallers and non-fallers with no near-falls for divided attention, balance and ADL ability (p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Attention deficits were common among this sample; sustained and divided attention deficits correlated with functional impairments and falls, highlighting that attention deficits might contribute to accident prone behaviour and falling.
community, rehabilitation, research, stroke
0269-2155
p.228
Hyndman, D.
a873e414-edfd-45b3-802f-e2ed528a8ab1
Ashburn, A.
ceaa5f52-a1c3-45a8-b175-5ac690c25780
Hyndman, D.
a873e414-edfd-45b3-802f-e2ed528a8ab1
Ashburn, A.
ceaa5f52-a1c3-45a8-b175-5ac690c25780

Hyndman, D. and Ashburn, A. (2002) Fall events among people with stroke living in the community: Attention deficits, balance and falls (Proceedings of SRR). Clinical Rehabilitation, 16 (2), p.228. (doi:10.1080/0963828031000122221).

Record type: Article

Abstract

PURPOSE: To describe levels of attention deficits among people with stroke living in the community and explore relationships between attention, balance, function and falls. METHOD: Forty-eight mobile community-dwelling people with stroke (30 men, 18 women, mean age 68.4 +/- 11.2) were recruited to this cross-sectional investigation through General Practitioners. Twenty-six participants had a right, 21 a left hemisphere infarction and one had a brain stem lesion; mean time since stroke was 46 months (range five to 204). Participants' were interviewed about fall-events; attention, balance and function were assessed using standardised tests. RESULTS: Visual inattention was identified in five participants (10%), deficits of sustained attention in 15 (31%), auditory selective attention in nine (19%), visual selective attention in 17 (35%) and divided attention deficits in 21 participants (43%). Sustained and divided attention scores correlated with balance, ADL ability and fall-status (p < 0.01). The balance and function of subjects with normal attention were better than those with abnormal scores (p < 0.01). Analysis of variance revealed differences between repeat-fallers and non-fallers with no near-falls for divided attention, balance and ADL ability (p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Attention deficits were common among this sample; sustained and divided attention deficits correlated with functional impairments and falls, highlighting that attention deficits might contribute to accident prone behaviour and falling.

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Published date: 2002
Keywords: community, rehabilitation, research, stroke
Organisations: Health Profs and Rehabilitation Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 17917
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/17917
ISSN: 0269-2155
PURE UUID: 62eff3a5-4100-4a3c-8374-786dd8c8bac6

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Date deposited: 27 Oct 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:02

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Author: D. Hyndman
Author: A. Ashburn

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