Authors
Rachel Milte, Maria Crotty
Publication date
2014/6/1
Source
Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology
Volume
28
Issue
3
Pages
395-410
Publisher
Baillière Tindall
Description
Frailty in older people is associated with a vulnerability to adverse events. While ageing is associated with a loss of physiological reserves, identifying those with the syndrome of frailty has the potential to assist clinicians to tailor treatments to those at the risk of future decline into disability with an increased risk of complications, morbidity and mortality. Sarcopenia is a key component of the frailty syndrome and on its own puts older people at risk of fragility fractures; however, the clinical syndrome of frailty affects the musculoskeletal and non-musculoskeletal systems. Hip fractures are becoming a prototype condition in the study of frailty. Following a hip fracture, many of the interventions are focused on limiting mobility disability and restoring independence with activities of daily living, but there are multiple factors to be addressed including osteoporosis, sarcopenia, delirium and weight loss. Established techniques of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Milte, M Crotty - Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology, 2014