Abstract
Osteoarthritis, a widespread joint disease, commonly results in considerable pain and functional disability, especially among older adults. At the same time, falls and fall injuries, also common among the older population, may not only contribute to the onset of osteoarthritis, but once established, to falls that lead to fractures and disability in their own right. But what does the research show specifically?
This report aimed to examine what is known about the interrelationship between falls and osteoarthritis and the implications that can be drawn from this information.
Using the PUBMED data base, studies describing an association between osteoarthritis and falls were sought. Those fulfilling the eligibility criteria were reviewed and summarized in narrative form.
Consistent support for an osteoarthritis-falls associated linkage is limited and not as robust as one would predict. Whether the observed associations between these health determinants are a cause of osteoarthritis, a consequence or both, or simply spurious findings is hard to decipher.
More numerous and carefully designed research to examine this issue is warranted and may be extremely helpful in preventing, as well as ameliorating a high degree of excess disability and associated fiscal costs due to both falls as well as osteoarthritis among the elderly.
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2020
Marks Ray.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Funding Interests:
Citation:
Introduction
Osteoarthritis, a common disabling progressive joint disease affecting joints such as the knee and hip is frequently associated with various degrees of pain and loss of the ability of the affected person to function physically. Among the challenges noted in cases with knee or hip joint osteoarthritis or both, are varying degrees of oftentimes intractable pain, stiffness, and limited mobility. An additional problem is the strong tendency for one or more affected lower limb joints to ‘give way’, along with possible further injury due to subsequent falls. In addition, diseases commonly associated with both aging and osteoarthritis such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases, are also all illnesses that can increase the risk serious falls by the affected individual who has osteoarthritis of one or more joints. Other related factors include the strong presence of depression, and lack of sleep, plus possible medications that increase falls risk. Age associated factors, as well as neurological disease correlates such as impaired proprioception, along with a possible decline in balance capacity In addition, and often less well publicized, are osteoarthritis disease correlates such poor muscle endurance, muscle timing deficits, and muscle weakness, and wasting. Impaired ambulation is an additional falls risk factor Moreover, those who are healthy and fall and fracture a hip or another bone, may also develop osteoarthritis that is challenging to treat even if they were previously healthy and mobile, and this situation in turn, can produce a cycle of persistent or recurrent fall-associated injuries. While all the above issues are somewhat reasonable in predicting that a sizeable number of older adults with osteoarthritis may be at risk for falls, and/or that older adults at risk for falls may sustain joint injuries that lead to osteoarthritis, there is no systematic body of consistently supportive evidence in this respect. Given the great need to foster healthy aging and high life quality for all older adults, and to develop preventive strategies that are empirically sound, rather than being chosen somewhat spuriously, this present overview sought to focus on examining the key findings that have been published in this regard, plus their implications for practitioners and researchers who desire to minimize the enormous health burden among the elderly, as well as society. One question posed was whether any consensus exists as to the relevance of any observed osteoarthritis-falls linkage, as the literature has been ambiguous as well as limited in scope on this point to date. Another was what is needed to further our understanding of these key risk factors for low life quality among the elderly. Both osteoarthritis as well as falls injuries currently pose an enormous challenge to health providers, as well as immense costs. Hence a better understanding of whether there is a clinically significant and robust relationship between these variables that can be predicted, and possibly intervened upon may prove of enormous value in public health efforts to offset the costs of poor health and excess morbidity among current aging population, while promoting life quality.
Results
In general, using the terms below, a modest number of records were identified in the PUBMED database over the years 1987-2020 as follows: Osteoarthritis and falls n=581 Falls injuries and osteoarthritis: n=213; 6=Randomized Controlled Trials Falls injuries and hip osteoarthritis: n=25 Falls injuries and knee osteoarthritis n=37 Osteoarthritis and falls risk n=281 However, although a fair number of postings were profiled from the search using the above terms, an extensive search of both the PUBMED and other data bases reviewed revealed only 50 reasonably relevant papers on the present topic of interest, with all being listed in PUBMED. That is, despite attempts to examine other data bases and to narrow the key words used as outlined above, the data base on the prevailing topics of interest was leaner than anticpated given more than 30 years of effort. As well, many topics that emerged during these searches were clearly irrelevant to this present discussion for various reasons, for example, these included conference abstracts, studies of healthy cohorts, completely unrelated studies, and pilot studies. Surprising too was the very limited number of observational or longitudinal clinical studies other than intervention studies on this general topic. What was found was that in some cases of studies that met the inclusion criteria for this review, but not all, was that falls and osteoarthritis can co-occur at a modest to a high rate of frequency in some cases with established osteoarthritis. But here again, the differing topics examined, as well as the different samples studied rendered aggregation of these data unfeasible. Issues studied were not only diverse and included, but were not limited to: the possible determinants of falls, the role of Tai Chi and falls, falls in the context of joint replacement surgery, falls and pain, but not osteoarthritis pain per se, among other diverse issues. Diverse measures of falls themselves, plus the differing definitions of osteoarthritis, among other factors, such as joint site studied, and disease duration precluded any meaningful summation of these rates in our opinion. According to some of this data, for example, although one can predict with reasonable certainty that older adults with lower limb osteoarthritis may be more prone to falling or falls than healthy age-matched adults, Ng and Tan This was not the finding however of Si et al. In 2018 meantime, di Laura Frattura et al. Ikutomo et al. An earlier study by Arnold and Faulkner More recently, Smith et al. A further study concerning the falling risk among patients with end-stage knee osteoarthritis as studied by Aljehani et al. Byun et al. In another study, Tsonga et al. Unsurprisingly, Iijima et al. In examining falls risk factors among adults with knee osteoarthritis using a systematic approach, Manlapaz et al. Surprisingly, limited evidence was found for knee instability, impaired proprioception, and use of walking aids as falls determinants. Tasci Barbaz et al. In another study of lower-extremity osteoarthritis and the risk of falls in a community-based longitudinal study of adults with and without osteoarthritis Doré et al. One factor noted by Picorelli et al. In another study, Mat et al. Individuals with clinical osteoarthritis and 'severe' overall symptoms on the other hand had an increased risk of falls compared to those with 'mild' disease. In individuals with radiological osteoarthritis, mild symptoms appeared protective of falls, while those with clinical osteoarthritis and severe symptoms had an increased falls risk compared to those with mild symptoms. However, Barbour et al. In the prospective study conducted by Doré et al. Anderson et al.’s Data further reveal the following lower limb osteoarthritis and/or aging related possible preventable falls determinants Balance deficits Cardiovascular disease Depression Diabetes Fear of falling Fear of movement Gait abnormalities High levels of narcotic usage Impaired mobility/physical performance Increasing number of symptomatic joints Ligamentous/joint instability Muscle weakness Neuromuscular factors/asymmetry Pain Poor walking endurance Sarcopenic obesity Sleep deficits Stiffness
Tasci Bozbaz et al.
100 participants, 50 with knee osteoarthritis, 50 healthy controls
Median falling index was 52 in knee osteoarthritis group; it was 31 in control group.
Primary knee osteoarthritis is a risk factors for falling.
Disease status predicted falls
Medical attention, proprioception/balance/gait training, muscle strengthening, and home safety arrangements may reduce falls risk in those with knee osteoarthritis
Pain and functional status did not appear to influence risk of falling
Dore et al.
1619 men and women, 45 years of age/older with osteoarthritis
Compared with non fallers, those reporting a fall were more likely to be Caucasian, older, + female
Individuals with multi-joint lower extremity symptomatic osteoarthritis, and those with symptomatic hip or knee joint disease, are at an increased risk for falls independent of known risk factors
Those who fell reported higher narcotics, sleep aids use, lung/ neurologic problems, prior falls
The odds of falls increased with numbers of affected symptomatic joints
Ikutomo et al.
153 women with end-stage hip osteoarthritis (mean age = 64.0 years) and 112 age- matched healthy women (mean age = 64.1 years)
The incidence of at least 1 fall in the past year was significantly higher in women with end-stage hip osteoarthritis
Women with end-stage hip osteoarthritis have an increased risk of falls and fall- induced injuries
Falls were most often caused by tripping and falling forward during the daytime
The prevention of falls in this vulnerable population should be a priority among health care practitioners
65% falls resulted in injuries and 13.0% in fractures
In particular, women who limp + have reduced lower knee extensor strength should ne targeted
The occurrence of a fall correlated with limping and knee extensor strength
Mat et al.
389 participants [from 229 fallers; 160 non-fallers, age (≥65 years)
Individuals with radiological osteoarthritis and 'mild' overall symptoms had reduced risk of falls compared to asymptomatic cases
In individuals with radiological osteoarthritis, mild symptoms appear protective of falls while
Those with clinically defined disease and 'severe' overall symptoms had an increased risk of falls compared to those with 'mild' osteoarthritis
Those with clinical osteoarthritis + severe symptoms have an increased falls risk compared to those with mild symptoms
Pandya et al.
17 patients with painful osteoarthritis of the knees (age range, 59.6 +/- 8.1 years) and 14 age-matched healthy control subjects (age range, 61.1 +/- 10.0 years)
Patients with knee osteoarthritis had a 37% lower obstacle avoidance success rate, a 54% lower single-leg stance duration
Knee osteoarthritis reduced obstacle avoidance success rates, supporting epidemiologic studies that have found osteoarthritis to be a risk factor for falls
Smith et al.
552 individuals with hip osteoarthritis were compared to 4244 individuals without hip osteoarthritis; 1350 individuals with knee osteoarthritis were compared to 3445 individuals without knee osteoarthritis
People with knee osteoarthritis had a 54% greater chance of experiencing a fall compared to those without; those with hip osteoarthritis had a 52% greater chance
There is an increased risk of falls and fractures in early- diagnosed knee and hip osteoarthritis compared to those without osteoarthritis
Those diagnosed with knee + hip osteoarthritis had an 80%
International guidelines on the management of hip and knee osteoarthritis should consider the importance of the management of falls risk
greater chance of experiencing a fracture
Soh et al.
4796 participants, 2270 (47%) were diagnosed with knee and/or hip osteoarthritis
72% participants with osteoarthritis reported falling and 17% reported fractures Personal factors were strongest predictors of falls and fractures A self-reported history of falls was a significant predictor of both increased falls + fracture risk
Personal factors are more likely to predict falls and fractures than impairments
It is important to question patients about their previous falls+ past medical history
Tsonga et al.
68 mean and 58 women scheduled for knee joint replacement
Fall frequency was 63.2% in past year
Patients with severe knee osteoarthritis are at high risk for falling
Discussion
Falls among the elderly remain an enormous health concern among aging populations worldwide. While their prevention remains highly challenging, this review examined the possible role of osteoarthritis-related falls, as one possible modifiable excess disease morbidity disabler, as well as hip fracture risk factor. In this regard, all related research efforts were examined, with a fair number indicating a salient role for falls that accompany osteoarthritis as possible risk factors for further injury, as well as low life quality While this set of ideas appears plausible, data stemming back to 1999 are still confusing however, for example at that time Arden et al. However, this explanation is challenged by findings of Smith et al. Zasadadka et al. As per Tasci Bozbaz et al. In addition, Nevitt et al. Messenger-Rapport and Thaker Anderson et al More careful delineation of samples, more diverse samples, and consistent approach to defining osteoarthritis related criteria, as well as attention to modes of falls assessment that may not represent actual falls rates (such as self-reports of whether or not an individual fell in the past 12 months, or if the respondent fell during the past 12 months, and had landed on the floor or ground? ) or estimates, but not precise numbers, of such falls events (eg falls that are reported as being ≥1 in the previous 12 months, in percent, or as 1, 2, or more falls)eg., Ng and Tan In addition, the precise role of other potentially modifiable risk factors not listed in this report, such as diabetic neuropathy, joint inflammation, assistive device use, footwear, sedatives, frailty, fatigue, and health beliefs about falling, which have not been studied to any degree clearly undermines the ability to interpret falls mechanisms and to intervene accordingly and warrant exploration given the immense burden of development of exists and that could be exacerbated by one or more preventable falls incidents. The development of inclusive screening tools, and use of electronic records may help practitioners to better assess salient treatment strategies and recommendations. While presently scarce when considering the many being offered and tested with no clear rationale, interventions proposed to reduce falling in the context of osteoarthritis may not be equally effective or optimally effective. As well, some may not be attainable during the COVID-19 pandemic, such as community based exercises. In the interim, however, and in spite of the lack of solid data, if we accept the premise that adults with lower limb osteoarthritis may fall more often than healthy adults, and that this may lead to worse more costly health outcomes, than not, efforts to carefully assess individual patient s risk in this regard would seem judicious. In addition, the delivery of appropriately tailored and targeted preventive messages and interventions to combat possible falls determinants in the home as well as work environment may prove more efficacious than not in the long term.
Conclusion
This review, which aimed to examine what we know about the linkage of osteoarthritis and falls or falls injuries, and related clinical implications, implies that there may be an increased risk of falls and fractures in some cases of knee and hip osteoarthritis that may be preventable. Those at most risk may be older cases with limited mobility and muscle strength, as well as unrelenting leg or low back pain or both. Given that many older adults now living in the community who are subject to COVID-19 2020 restrictions of care, are at risk for osteoarthritis as well as comorbid conditions that can lead to falls, more preventive efforts against this possibility are indicated., among others. In this regard, and based on what we do know, the value of efforts to minimize pain, while fostering muscle strength capacity and sleep in older people with osteoarthritis and without osteoarthritis may prove highly beneficial in non fallers, as well as recurrent fallers. As outlined by Ling and Batton In this respect, measures applied by Levinger et al.