Eur J Intern Med
September 2012
Background: Restoring functional independence in elderly people with disabilities is one of the main purposes of a geriatric rehabilitation unit. However, the rehabilitation period may also represent a useful circumstance to identify predictors of long-term health outcomes. The aim of this study was to evaluate a broad spectrum of characteristics in geriatric patients admitted to a rehabilitation unit in order to identify possible predictors of long-term survival.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Our goal was to evaluate the proportion of community-dwelling elderly people at risk for malnutrition and the effect of different socioeconomic status (SES) indicators as well as social, physical and leisure activities in late life on the risk for malnutrition.
Design: A cross-sectional population-based study.
Setting: A sub-urban area in Northern Italy.
Background And Aims: Understanding which patients benefit from rehabilitation programs may be useful in balancing resources and needs. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether cognitive and nutritional status are associated with functional improvement after rehabilitation in old persons.
Methods: 2650 patients (aged > or =60 years) consecutively admitted to a geriatric rehabilitation unit in Italy between August 2001 and December 2005, were included.
Celiac disease is not a negligible cause of malabsorption in the elderly. Diarrhea, loss of weight and abdominal discomfort are often absent so that celiac disease has indeed a subtle, paucisymptomatic, course in the elderly. More than 50% of the patients have extraintestinal symptoms; only 10-40% have typical complaints pointing to small-intestinal biopsy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To evaluate the relationship between depressive symptoms, cognition and somatic diseases on functional status of geriatric patients at hospital discharge.
Method: Patients 65+ years consecutively admitted to the acute care geriatric ward of the Internal Medicine Department I, Civil Hospital of Brescia, Italy, from February 1998 to December 2000 (n = 830) were examined. Functional disability was defined as need of physical assistance in at least one of the basic Activities of Daily Living (ADL).