Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
ELDERLY PATIENT

120 General Medical Emergencies


MANAGEMENT


1 Delirium and acutely decompensated dementia require hospital admission
(do not simply sedate).
2 Depression and a high suicide risk require urgent referral to a psychiatrist
and possible hospital admission.

Falls in the elderly


DIAGNOSIS


Always consider the underlying cause as well as the potential result following any
fall in the elderly:
1 Cause of the fall:
(i) Accidental:
(a) obstacles in the home, such as a trailing flex, the edge of a
carpet, poor lighting, or no handrails
(b) inappropriate footwear.
(ii) Musculoskeletal:
(a) arthritis
(b) obesity
(c) weakness
(d) physical inactivity.
(iii) Visual failure:
(a) cataracts
(b) senile macular degeneration
(c) glaucoma.
(iv) Sedating drugs:
(a) benzodiazepines
(b) antihistamines
(c) psychotropics
(d) alcohol.
(v) Postural hypotension:
(a) occult bleeding
(b) autonomic failure
(c) drug-induced.
(vi) Syncopal episode:
(a) cardiac arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, heart block
(b) vertebrobasilar insufficiency.
(vii) Cerebral disorder:
(a) Parkinson’s disease
(b) ataxia
(c) seizure
(d) stroke.
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