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  Vol. 2 No. 8, August 1993 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Which Primary Care Patients With Dizziness Will Develop Persistent Impairment?

Kristy E. Bailey, MPH; Philip D. Sloane, MD, MPH; Madeline Mitchell, MUR P; John Preisser, MA

Arch Fam Med. 1993;2(8):847-852.


Abstract

Objective
To determine which factors identifiable during an office visit for dizziness predict chronic impairment from dizziness 3 months later.

Design
A prospective cohort study with 3-month telephone follow-up.

Setting
Nine primary care office practices in North Carolina.

Subjects
117 adults who presented to primary care practices because of dizziness.

Outcome Measures
Our outcome of interest, restriction of daily activities due to dizziness 3 months after the enrollment visit, was characterized using three different but correlated self-reported measures. Independent analytic models tested the relationship between demographic variables, health status, psychological state, and dizziness characteristics at baseline and our three measures of activity restriction due to dizziness.

Results
A two-stage logistic regression analysis identified the following baseline characteristics to be independent predictors in one or more models of activitylimiting dizziness at 3 months: dependency in instrumental activities of daily living (odds ratio [OR]=11.1, P=.002); a high anxiety score (OR=5.7, P=.003); self-rating of health as fair or poor (OR=3.2, P=.042); the presence of three or more chronic conditions (OR=1.9, P=.022); interference from chronic conditions (OR=1.7, P=.012); dizziness duration of greater than 1 year (OR=20.9, P<.001); frequent dizziness (OR=4.3, P=.016); subjective imbalance (OR=4.7, P=.012); and activity limitation due to dizziness (OR=11.7, P<.001).

Conclusion
To estimate the prognosis and clinical significance of dizziness complaints, primary care physicians should take into account not only the characteristics of the patient's dizziness but also the patient's baseline health status and psychological state.



Author Affiliations

From the Department of Family Medicine, School of Medicine (Mss Bailey and Mitchell and Dr Sloane), and the Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health (Mr Preisser), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Dizziness: State of the Science
Sloane et al.
ANN INTERN MED 2001;134:823-832.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

The Prevalence of Dizziness and Its Association With Functional Disability in a Biracial Community Population
Aggarwal et al.
Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences 2000;55:288M-292.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

HEALTH AND MENTAL STATUS PREDICT PERSISTENT DIZZINESS
JWatch General 1993;1993:8-8.
FULL TEXT  




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