During a five‐year period, 90 patients who had undergone lower‐extremity amputations when aged 60 or older were treated at the Amputee Clinic of the Jewish Hospital of St. Louis. Seventeen of the 90 were not fitted with prostheses because of various medical contraindications. Thirteen of the remaining 73 patients who were fitted with prostheses had died by the time of follow‐up, and 23 others could not be located. Of the 37 known survivors, 23 wore their prosthesis for more than six hours daily and used it as their main mode of locomotion; 14 used it only occasionally or not at all. Sex and age at the time of amputation were of little value in predicting the success of prosthetic rehabilitation. Patients with below‐knee amputations fared much better than those with above‐knee amputations. Contraindications to fitting an aged amputee with a prosthesis are mental deterioration, congestive heart failure, severe angina pectoris, and advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Neurologic disorders such as parkinsonism or stroke with a significant neurologic residual are additional contraindications. Patients who have ulcerations or infections of the remaining extremity or who have severe contractures of the stump usually cannot be fitted with a prosthesis. The ability to use axillary crutches is not a realistic prerequisite for supplying an aged amputee with a prosthesis. A patient who has walked before the amputation and who afterward can walk with a walker, usually will be able to use an artificial limb. Amputees who cannot be expected to use a prosthesis can still be rehabilitated to an independent wheelchair existence.
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