Content » Vol 40, Issue 10

Short communication

Cognitive status and ambulatory rehabilitation outcome in geriatric patients

Lutz Vogt, Katja Wieland, Matthias Bach, Heiko Himmelreich, W. Winfried Banzer
DOI: 10.2340/16501977-0260

Abstract

Objective: To determine the effect of admission cognitive status on gait and stair climbing rehabilitation outcome in geriatric patients.
Design: Before-after trial.
Subjects: A total of 179 geriatric patients (139 women and 40 men; age range 67–97 years) consecutively admitted to a geriatric inpatient rehabilitation regimen (mean length of stay 28. 7 (standard deviation 13. 9) days).
Methods: Assessment of admission cognitive status by the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE); determination of the ambulatory status before and after rehabilitation by the Performance-Oriented Mobility Assessment (POMA) and standardized judgements about stair climbing ability.
Results: Approximately two-thirds of the patients demonstrated functional ability improvements in at least 5 points at the individual level during rehabilitation (as measured by the total POMA scale (POMA-T)). However, at rehabilitation discharge cognitively impaired patients still demonstrated a 3. 4 times (95% confidence interval=1. 4–8. 6) higher chance of increased fall risk and only 24% of the cohort was able to negotiate stairs with slight or no limitations.
Conclusion: Although cognitively impaired patients demonstrated an functional overall intervention response comparable with cognitively intact patients the present study evidenced that the geriatric cohort with reduced mental status (MMSE >17) are at greater risk of falling and have a greater need for supervision, both in hospital and at discharge.

Lay Abstract

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