Conference Coverage

Big risk of serious falls after first episode of syncope


 

AT THE ESC CONGRESS 2017

BARCELONA – Patients have an exorbitant 80% increased risk of hospitalization for falls resulting in fracture or head injury in the first year after discharge following a first-ever episode of syncope, according to a Danish national cohort study. One in five patients who sustained a fall resulting in hospitalization experienced a hip fracture, according to Anna-Karin Nume, MD, of the University of Copenhagen.

In this interview at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology, Dr. Nume highlights findings from her study, which included 125,763 Danish adults with first-time syncope.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

Framingham: Arterial stiffening not inevitable with aging
MDedge Cardiology
For Americans, less salt is still too much
MDedge Cardiology
SPRINT: Intensive BP control cut cardiovascular risk in patients with prediabetes
MDedge Cardiology
Nearly half of patients who stop taking opioids for 6 months resume use later
MDedge Cardiology
Even a few middle age pounds are dangerous
MDedge Cardiology
Release nears for revised U.S. hypertension guidelines
MDedge Cardiology
Marijuana use triples risk of death from hypertension
MDedge Cardiology
Air pollution seen acting on stress hormones
MDedge Cardiology
AAP releases revised guidelines on screening, treatment of hypertension
MDedge Cardiology
Cognitive decline not seen with lower BP treatment targets
MDedge Cardiology