Follow
Share

I feel terrible, my mom fell on my cement porch and fractured her hip right in front of me. I knew instantly it was broken. I have been so careful and she had been doing so well and happy. She had her surgery today and the Dr said it went great and she will be able to bear weight. She was fully ambulatory before her fall. I hope she will do well in rehab. She is a great mom and I pray she can come home and I can continue to care for her. Anyone have experience with a broken hip at her age and how they did? Any good tips for rehab?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
My mother has broken both of her hips. She broke the right one at the age of 88 and then the left one at the age of 91. Her recovery from the surgery and performance at rehab was markedly better when she was 88 and she recovered to the point where she could ambulate using a walker with very little problem.

After the break this past March, at age 91, Mom has not recovered nearly as quickly and was affected much more to her detriment by the anesthesia from the surgery. She is weaker and 3 years farther into her dementia, so she is now in a wheelchair with very little chance of ever walking again. She is so very afraid of falling again that she is hesitant to even try to get up and walk using her walker and with her Physical Therapist by her side. Mom is weaker and more frail than she was when she broke the first hip and seems content to be in a wheelchair all the time after the most recent break.

I truly believe that the level of dementia truly affects the recovery process and the ability to rehabilitate to a previous level of activity.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

My Mom was 92 when she broke her hip, after surgery she went to rehab and was back home in 8 weeks or so, living by herself. I thought that was the end but it wasn't.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Msbarbie: I am so sorry that your mother broke her hip. Hopefully her recovery will go well since she was ambulatory and sounds like she has a good attitude, which is important.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Msbarbie,
I expect you are still in the middle of this crises? Any turn towards a direction yet?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Rehab will have physical therapists who will be in charge of her exercise and mobility. Check with them about how mom is doing and her needs when she gets closer to discharge.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Mom aged 92 broke her hip in September. Fully ambulatory before (with cane when going outdoors), now uses a walker at all times. Ambulatory with difficulty not able to climb stairs.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Guess what...accidents happen so unless you pushed her you’re not at fault. You feel badly she fell of course and is hurt.
Yes! My dad fell and not only break his hip but his femur separated from the hip prostheses that was already there. he was 96. The surgery was quite complicated to wire his femur back to his hip prosthesis. He then went to rehab but he wasn’t good about doing the exercises or walking very far. He had dementia at the time. He didn’t make enough progress to ever walk safely with a walker so became confined to a wheelchair. He then had to move from AL to LTC because of it. He lived another 2 years and 8 months. Well past the “6 month projection” of the surgeon. He was a stubborn man but very unhappy after that.
my advice is see if you can continue PT after rehab to be sure she can get her strength back and that means you will have to motivate her and work with her. I’ve had two hip replacements in my 60’s and broke a hip in my 50’s repaired with screws. I’ve seen a big difference in my healing and strength with my hip replacements. It isn’t easy. So depending on how your mom was before the fall will determine recovery. Be sure she gets a minimum of 60 Grams of protein a day during recovery as it takes a lot for bone to remodel and heal. The body requires more calories during healing. My surgeon emphasized this. A really tasty protein drink if Orgain or Premier protein and doesn’t have all that extra stuff that Ensure has. Tuna sandwiches are high, as is Greek yogurt. These were my go to's.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

A lot of it has to do with her mental and physical abilities prior to the fall. A person who is functioning normally mentally prior to, will understand what they are supposed to do at the rehab. The more they participate, the better the outcome. The down side is pain meds that can alter her mental function or make her want to just sleep, not participate, for the most part. Since doctor said it looks like a good outcome, then encouragement to get her back home will be important. As well as observation by you at the facility to ensure she is not being left in a bed all of the time. Observation of her therapy (length of time she is actually working on her abilities and what she is doing) is equally important. Do not assume she is really going to therapy each day or for the amount of time they tell you she is going.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Yes. My 91 year old mom broke her hip two months ago while she was fully ambulatory. As a small framed, 98 pound lady, she had corrective surgery and after a month of rehab has recovered quite well. Yesterday, she walked from kitchen to the bathroom. All good for us.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Each patient is as unique as his or her own fingerprint. So time will tell how it goes. If our Mom came out of the anesthesia with no worsening of any mental deficits you are already WELL AHEAD in this game. Please don't feel bad yourself. I am 79. I recognize "to my bones", as a retired RN how much less certain my balance is, despite the fact I walk more than a mile daily, and that, if I DO go down, something will likely bust. It's a fact of life. I laugh about being on the bus and feeling like a tossed feather, despite the fact I weigh more than I ever did prior in my life. Fragility is a fact. Hope your Mom does just great in rehab. A lot depends upon determination. You already know the risk factors of age, and what "might" happen. Try not to "go there" and take this a day at a time. I surely do wish you so much luck.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

This was many years ago, but my grandmother broke one hip in her early 90s, had successful hip replacement, and continued to live on her own with increasing help from my mother (shopping, some cooking, laundry). Then, she broke her other hip when she was I think 96 or 97--again, successful surgery, but this time she started having to use a walker and could no longer be by herself but had home health aides. I think it helped her recovery both times that my grandmother was in excellent overall health--only meds she took were vitamins and a mild sleep aid, no dementia, no medical problems other than osteoporosis (which is why she broke both hips). Dr. who did the surgery said she had the cardiovascular system of someone 25 years younger! She lived to be 102.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

When a neighbor broke her hip the doctor thought that it was not anyone's fault - the reason she fell was because the hip itself broke, it was not the fall that caused it. So I don't think you should feel at fault here.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
jacobsonbob Apr 2021
Osteoporosis can cause a bone to break essentially "spontaneously". During the night, my mother was sitting on a toilet and the straight part of her femur broke, and because my father was in the hospital due to a stroke (which, fortunately, turned out to have minimal long-term effects), my mother was home alone, so she had to figure out how to drop to the floor and crawl to the bedroom where a phone was on a night table, and call for help (a process she described as the most frightening time in her life, until dementia set in years later such that she couldn't remember it!). She went through surgery and physical therapy successfully, and came back home. A year later, she was walking down stairs and the other femur broke the same way, so she sat down on a step. Fortunately, my father was home, and a family friend who was going to drive her to the dentist was there, so the trip was made to the hospital instead. She went through the same process as before, and ended up with a rod in each leg.

After the first time, she had asked the osteologist whether this was likely to happen to the other leg, and the answer was "Well, they have exactly the same history..."
(4)
Report
hello, my father broke his hip after a fall and was rehabilitated in a normal facility that I believe was inappropriate to his condition in terms of therapy, in America the typical therapy is to give the elderly person painkillers have them walk on a treadmill as long as they can stand the pain, and then put them in a wheelchair for the rest of the day. What happens is that is not enough movement, they can’t handle the pain, and a majority get pneumonia from The lack of activity and die from pneumonia, several weeks only after their fall. I instead highly suggest that your mom rehabilitates in warm salt water, where she will have no pain will be able to expand the range of motion, slowly, and does not need to take as many or any pain painkillers, I also suggest cold water instead of pain medication as therapy, and also to aid in increasing circulation to heal the break,
I wish you great luck, know that you did nothing wrong. And the ocean cures us all.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

At 88 my stepmom fell and broke her left hip. She was showing me she could pick her recycle bucket up with her foot, lost her balance and fell before I could catch her. She was up and walking the day after surgery.
At 92, she fell and broke her right hip and arm. After surgery and 30 days in rehab, the doctors strongly recommended she move to assisted living as she refused to have 24 hr care in her independent living apartment. I found her a lovely assisted living facility however she never regained her mobility. I think she just gave up because she couldn't live independently anymore. She never wanted to be a bother, but she had the ability to get people to do what she wanted in her own quiet little way.


wanted in her quiet little way.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
cweissp Apr 2021
My grandmother in the 1980s broke her hip, we believe her hip broke causing her to fall - she was in her 90s. While she came though surgery and anesthesia really well. She hit a snag at rehab. While I was visiting her in the hospital she told me she was giving up. I begged her not to, but I guess the pain from rehab and being tired won out. She lived a few years longer, but dementia soon took her over. It was so hard watching a vibrant, curious, independent woman lost to dementia.

Msbarbie I do hope your mother's outcome will be much better. Just keep an eye on her as she works through rehab and if she looks as if she is giving up talk to her doctors. Medicine has come a long was since the 1980s.

My prayers to your family for your mother.
(0)
Report
My dad fell and broke his hip in memory care at age 89. In his case is was a simple surgery, couple screws. He went from the hospital to a very good rehab center. His dementia was fairly advanced at this point but he was still friendly and cooperative for the most part and had been very mobile prior to the broken hip.

He did very well and after two weeks of rehab I was able to move him 600 miles to a nursing home near me. He regained his mobility and was a real handful for the staff who had to chase him all over the facility. Dad died peacefully in September of last year.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
disgustedtoo May 2021
"He regained his mobility and was a real handful for the staff who had to chase him all over the facility."

:-)

Sorry you lost your dad, he sounds like he was a real pistol!
(1)
Report
So sorry about the fall. Accidents happen quickly even you if you are right beside them.

Of course, it is upsetting to you. Speak with her doctor and if she isn’t able to go home, ask him to break the news to her.

Will keep you and your mom in my thoughts and prayers.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Watch & wait.
Have hope.
But also realistic expectations.

#hip in the very aged is a game-changer - for the whole family.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

I’ve gone through falls twice now in the last 2 1/2 years with two very different outcomes. My mother is now 92 so she is a bit younger than your mom, but is frail and has dementia which complicates everything.

Fall #1: Long story, but basically mom broke her arm and hip but the er drs. missed the broken hip until we were sent back to another er a week later. She was 90, fully ambulatory and had been able to fully care for herself as far as dressing, bathing and toileting. Her dementia was moderate. In the hospital she had a bad reaction to Tramadol & started hallucinating. I think there was delirium going on too. Once meds were adjusted she settled down so by the time she was assigned to rehab, things were better but not great. This time period was before covid so we could visit every day and monitor progress. She was "with it” enough to know she needed to put in the effort to save her remaining independence. By the time she finished rehab, facility & home, she was able to walk again with just a 3-prong cane. Her dementia had moved to a more advanced level, but other than me now needing to help her with showers, things were not too different.

Fall #2: Mother’s dementia was worse by this time, she was more frail and covid was going on in it’s earliest, most strict phase. After she fell in her bedroom, she was taken by ambulance and I was not allowed to see her face to face again until her rehab discharge about a month later. She had a successful surgery too before going into rehab. All my updates on her PT progress were over the phone. I did window visits with her but it was hard for her to understand that the person on the phone with her was also the person at the window. By the time she was released, I was shocked at how much weight she had lost. She wouldn’t eat much,even at home, for the first couple of weeks. The home health people would come and try to get her to walk and she would just cry and beg me to take her back to her chair. She couldn’t understand or remember the things they were trying to coach her on. She was sooo tired and weak and flat did not have the ability to put in the effort she needed to regain her strength. I think if she didn’t have the dementia she might have been able to rally again like she did after the first fall, but who knows. Physical therapy was finally stopped and we had her accessed for hospice. She’s been on hospice ever since. She can only walk a few steps now (with someone directly beside her, her white knuckles holding on for dear life to her full-size walker) and even then she barely makes it from her bed to her sitting chair (about 8 feet). Every other move she makes is from my husband or I pushing her in her the wheelchair. She can’t do any of the transfers on her own and offers little to no help to whoever is moving her. It takes two of us to get her on/off/and cleaned up from the toilet now. That was a giant change that took awhile to adjust to. Hospice handles her bathing. Hospice has been a true Godsend.
Bottom line, at your mom’s age, even if she doesn’t have dementia and is in reasonably good shape, the weeks of rehab ahead will probably be a difficult and challenging process. I would start mentally preparing for the possibility that she will come home needing a different level of care AND proving to be an even greater fall risk than ever. I would also suggest watching for behavior and mood changes that can come from new meds and delirium from all the change and stress. And as far as PT goes, keep in mind, that sometimes what they “can do” and “what they’re willing to do” are not the same thing. Watching my mom go through PT at home after the 2nd fall was a misery. It got to where all the pushing and pushing was just more than she could handle mentally or physically. One last thing I noted with both falls was that once mom got home again, she started eating better and just doing better overall. So improvement can continue, just keep expectations real. Good luck & God bless.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report
jacobsonbob Apr 2021
"...what they 'can do' and 'what they’re willing to do' are not the same thing"--I wonder which is a subset of the other, or if there is partial overlap.

I suppose at a somewhat earlier stage, elderly people try to be independent, and suffer the consequences of attempting activities they no longer can do safely. Then when this results in an accident, they eventually end up in physical therapy, but are unwilling or unmotivated to "push to the limit" of what they can do (sometimes due to residual pain).

I suspect from Ishep3750's comment, what the person is willing to do is a subset of what that they are capable of doing, at least in physical therapy. Soon after my mother entered a nursing home after moving to OH, physical therapy was attempted because she had gotten weaker due to reduced activity over time. Because she had some pain in one leg (which she believed to have resulted from the fact that the bone had broken a few years earlier, as I described in a response to a comment from rovana), she became reluctant to continue the therapy. Of course discontinuing the physical therapy resulted in Medicare no longer covering the expenses (but I didn't have the heart to tell her that this decision resulted in an additional out-of-pocket cost of ca. $16K).
(0)
Report
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter