Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology
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Elderly patients represent the majority of the surgical population scheduled for ophthalmological surgery. Eye surgery is usually minimally invasive, enabling most of the procedures to be performed as day-case surgery despite the high co-morbidity of these patients. This, however, requires a specific perioperative anaesthetic strategy. In this chapter we address features of perioperative care in the geriatric population undergoing eye surgery, from pre-medication and pre-operative testing, to choice and performance of anaesthesia, and finally to post-anaesthesia care.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2003
ReviewCognitive function after anaesthesia in the elderly.
Despite advances in peri operative care, a significant percentage of elderly patients experience transient post operative delirium and/or long-term post-operative cognitive dysfunction (POCD). This chapter reviews the aetiology, clinical features, preventive strategies and treatment of these syndromes. Pre-operative, intra-operative, and post-operative risk factors for delirium and POCD following cardiac and non-cardiac surgery are discussed. ⋯ Currently there is no single therapy that can be recommended for treating post-operative cognitive deterioration. Primary prevention of delirium and POCD is probably the most effective treatment strategy. Several large clinical trials show the effectiveness of multicomponent intervention protocols that are designed to target well-documented risk factors in order to reduce the incidence of post-operative delirium and, possibly, POCD in the elderly.
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The elderly are an expanding population of patients presenting for anaesthesia. The pharmacokinetics of anaesthetic agents in the elderly deserves special attention because the normal ageing process and the effect of age-related diseases affect organ systems in a heterogeneous way with unpredictable consequences. The pharmacokinetics of each drug is also affected by these changes in a specific way and, together with the pharmacodynamic consequences, makes drug use and drug dosing challenging in this population. Although a decrease in bolus and infusion rates is a common theme, only pharmacokinetic modelling of drug disposition in the elderly will provide accurate dosing guidelines and increase the margin of safety.
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The orthopaedic surgeon brings to the operating room some of the greatest challenges for the anaesthesiologist. Various factors, such as age, health status, disease process, type and extent of operative procedure, provide differing circumstances, which an anaesthesiologist is obliged to cope with. This contrasts to other surgical specialities in which patient factors and operative procedures are much more predictable. ⋯ The concept of the optimal post-operative multimodal regimen needs to be defined. The application of NSAID and paracetamol is an integral part of this concept, and the dose of opioids should be titrated to the lowest efficient dose needed. Thus, this chapter discusses the different controversies and future trends of anaesthesia with regard to the elderly in orthopaedic surgery.
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Demographic data indicate an increasing workload of geriatric anaesthesia due to advancing life expectancy and reduced thresholds for high-invasive and high-risk surgery in the elderly. Chronological and biological age may be inconsistent, and the existence of age-related changes may vary between organ systems in the same individual. ⋯ In conclusion, listing current diagnoses will not be sufficient in the assessment of the geriatric patient because age-related changes do not necessarily manifest as pathological entities. Rather, pre-operative examination should focus on determination of individual margins of organ function reserve.