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Prospective analysis of falls in dominant ataxias.

Authors :
Fonteyn, E M R
Schmitz-Hübsch, T
Verstappen, C C P
Baliko, L
Bloem, B R
Boesch, S
Bunn, Lisa
Giunti, P
Globas, C
Klockgether, T
Melegh, Bela
Pandolfo, Massimo
Schöls, Lüdger
Timmann, D
van de Warrenburg, B P C
Fonteyn, E M R
Schmitz-Hübsch, T
Verstappen, C C P
Baliko, L
Bloem, B R
Boesch, S
Bunn, Lisa
Giunti, P
Globas, C
Klockgether, T
Melegh, Bela
Pandolfo, Massimo
Schöls, Lüdger
Timmann, D
van de Warrenburg, B P C
Source :
European neurology, 69 (1
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

In a previous retrospective study, we demonstrated that falls are common and often injurious in dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) and that nonataxia features play an important role in these falls. Retrospective surveys are plagued by recall bias for the presence and details of prior falls. We therefore sought to corroborate and extend these retrospective findings by means of a prospective extension of this fall study. 113 patients with SCA1, SCA2, SCA3 or SCA6, recruited from the EuroSCA natural history study, were asked to keep a fall diary in between their annual visits to the participating centres. Additionally, patients completed a detailed questionnaire about the first three falls, to identify specific fall circumstances. Relevant disease characteristics were retrieved from the EuroSCA registry. 84.1% of patients reported at least one fall during a time period of 12 months. Fall-related injuries were common and their frequency increased with that of falls. The presence of nonataxia symptoms was associated with a higher fall frequency. This study confirms that falls are a frequent and serious complication of SCA, and that the presence of nonataxia symptoms is an important etiological factor in its occurrence.<br />Journal Article<br />Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
European neurology, 69 (1
Notes :
No full-text files, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn872083150
Document Type :
Electronic Resource