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Senior Citizen Health & Medicine
Older Surgical Patients at Greater Risk for
Developing Cognitive Problems
Elderly who developed cognitive problems most
likely to die in year after surgery
Jan. 3, 2008 - Patients over the age of 60 who have
elective surgeries such as joint replacements, hysterectomies and other
non-emergency, inpatient procedures, are at an increased risk for
long-term cognitive problems, according to a new study led by Duke
University Medical Center researchers.
The study also found that elderly patients who
developed these postoperative cognitive problems were more likely to die
in the first year after surgery.
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We have known that patients undergoing heart
surgery are at risk for cognitive dysfunction -- problems with memory,
concentration, processing of information -- but the effects of
non-cardiac surgeries on brain function are not as well-understood,
said Terri Monk, M.D., an anesthesiologist at Duke and the Durham
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and lead investigator on the study.
Our study found that increasing age put patients
in this population at greater risk for cognitive problems and this is
significant because the elderly are the fastest growing segment of the
population. We know that half of all people 65 and older will have at
least one surgery in their lifetime.
The researchers published their findings in the
January 1, 2008 issue of the journal Anesthesiology and the results were
published early online on December 27, 2007 on the journals Web site.
The article is accompanied by a supportive
editorial and a companion article detailing the types of cognitive
dysfunction that developed and the effects on patients daily lives. The
study was funded by the National Institute on Aging, the Anesthesia
Patient Safety Foundation and the I. Heerman Foundation.
The researchers measured memory and the ability to
process information in more than 1000 adult patients of different ages.
Patients were tested preoperatively, at the time of hospital discharge,
and three months after surgery. More than 200 control subjects took the
same tests at the same frequency, but did not undergo surgery or
anesthesia.
The study found that many of the young, middle-aged
and elderly patients experienced postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD)
at the time they left the hospital. But three months later, those aged
60 and older were more than twice as likely to exhibit POCD.
Those with POCD at both the time of hospital
discharge and three months after surgery also were more likely to die
within the first year after surgery, Monk said.
The large difference in the prevalence of POCD
between what we termed the elderly -- those aged 60 and over -- and the
younger groups we were studying validates the general perception that
the elderly are predisposed to cognitive impairment after major
surgery, Monk said.
POCD was more common among those patients with
lower educational level and a history of a stroke that had left no
noticeable neurologic impairment.
Education protected against postoperative
cognitive problems, likely because education may provide an opportunity
to condition the brain, and better equip it to withstand injury, much
like physical exercise has a protective effect on the body, Monk said.
The reasons why cognitive decline is associated
with early death are not completely understood, but its possible that
patients with prolonged cognitive dysfunction might be less able to take
medicines correctly or may not recognize the need to seek medical care
for symptoms of complications, Monk said.
Studies on normal aging have shown a link between
abrupt cognitive decline and early death, so we speculated that
surgery-related cognitive dysfunction might have the same effect, she
said.
Why some patients suffer POCD is not known, but one
hypothesis is that surgery and the accompanying anesthesia might cause
inflammation in the brain that can affect the patients ability to
learn, retain or remember information, Monk said.
Now that the implications of long-term POCD are
better understood, doctors must devise strategies to prevent or mitigate
the detrimental effects of surgery and anesthesia on the aging brain,
Monk said. The types of interventions and how to implement them will be
the subject of further research, she said.
Other researchers on this study include B. Craig
Weldon of Duke; and Cyndi Garvan, Duane Dede, Maria van der Aa, Kenneth
Heilman and Joachim Gravenstein of the University of Florida.
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