e-ISSN: 2321-3647
logo

American Journal of Pharmacy and Health Research

Published

A Hospital Based Prospective Study on the Prevalence of Anaemia In Elderly Patients

Published in December 2015 Issue 12 (Vol. 3, Issue 12, 2015)

A Hospital Based Prospective Study on the Prevalence of Anaemia In Elderly Patients - Issue cover

Abstract

Anaemia is a common disorder in older individuals. The prevalence of anaemia increases with age to over >20% in persons aged 65 years and over1. The aim of the present study was to analyse the prevalence rate of anaemia, and evaluate the various underlying causes, the haematological profile and types of anaemia in elder patients. A total of 82 subjects of age 65yrs and above were included in our study. Laboratory profiles along with various clinical conditions were collected to analyse the underlying cause. Majority of patients had Mild anaemia with a normocytic sub categorization. Pallor was the most common symptom, found in our study. The various underlying causes found were fever, renal problem, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, COPD, tuberculosis, etc. Identifying anaemia as an important aspect of a -comprehensive geriatric assessment is absolutely essential further to clinical detection. Confirming the type of anaemia is critical to direct the investigation for profiling the etiology since it is well known that the treatment of anaemia goes a long way in improving the overall outcome and quality of life.

Download Article

PDF

Best for printing and citation

File size: 0.0 MB
Format: PDF

Download Article

PDF

Best for printing and citation

File size: 0.0 MB
Format: PDF

Article Information

AJPHR312006

AJPHR-31-000006

2015-12-01

Article Impact

Views:4,076
Downloads:2,123

How to Cite

APA
MLA
Chicago
Harvard
Vancouver
IEEE
ACM
ACS
ABNT
Turabian
RIS (EndNote/Zotero/Mendeley)
BibTeX

PA & T., B. & Ajikumar & Jasmin (2015). A Hospital Based Prospective Study on the Prevalence of Anaemia In Elderly Patients. American Journal of Pharmacy and Health Research, 3(12), xx-xx. https://ajphr.com/articles/AJPHR312006

Article Actions