Cammino nel paziente Parkinsoniano dopo frattura dell'anca trattata chirurgicamente

Translated title of the contribution: Deambulation in patients with parkinson's disease after hip fracture surgically treated

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background. The aims of this study were: 1) to evaluate the degree of walking of patients with Parkinson's syndrome after hip fracture surgically treated; 2) to reexamine the evidence for internal fixation versus endoprosthesis. Methods. Forty-one patients with Parkinson's syndrome after hip fracture surgically treated have been studied. Twenty-four fractures (20 femoral neck, 4 subcapital) were treated by endoprosthesis, and 17 by internal fixation (pertrochanteric fractures). The average age of the patients was 76±7 years (7 male, 34 female); 97,5% patients could walk without any help before the fracture. Results. At the end of the rehabilitation period, 21.9% patients were unable to walk; 2.4% walked with assistance of two persons, 24.4% with assistance of one person, 19.4% with two canes, 17.1% with one cane, 14.8% without assistance and without cane. At discharge, 87.5% of patients went directly back home, while the remaining 12.5% were admitted to Geriatric hospitals. The degree of walking was higher in fractures treated by endoprosthesis (p

Translated title of the contributionDeambulation in patients with parkinson's disease after hip fracture surgically treated
Original languageItalian
Pages (from-to)161-166
Number of pages6
JournalMinerva Medica
Volume92
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - 2001

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Medicine(all)

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