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(Excerpted from United Press International, Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2004)

More rehab needed after hip fractures

Six months of supervised rehabilitation and resistance training helps elderly patients recover more fully from hip fractures, U.S. researchers said.

Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis assigned 90 hip-fracture patients to six months of either supervised, outpatient physical therapy and resistance training or standard, self-conducted home exercises.

They found participants who received the supervised therapy and resistance training improved on functional, strength, balance, mobility and quality-of-life measures significantly more than the standard therapy group. Researchers also found bone density for all participants did not decline, contrary to previous research that has shown decline in density up to 4 percent in the year after a hip fracture.




Appeared in:

•   More rehab needed after hip fractures

United Press International, Tuesday, Aug. 17, 2004


Story also ran in 13 others:  HealthTalk Canada, Med Scape, Reuters, Washington Times, HealthCentral.com, Ivanhoe, Medical News Today (UK), drkoop.com, Belleville News-Democrat, Yahoo News, WBBM-TV (IL), WKBW-TV Buffalo and NY
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Washington University in St. LouisSchool of Medicine

Affiliated with Barnes-Jewish Hospital and St. Louis Children's Hospital, members of BJC HealthCare.

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Revised:

Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2004


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