Title: Perioperative Considerations in Care of the Elderly
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2Perioperative Considerations in Care of the
Elderly
- Fred Weitz MD
- Emory University
- Dept. of Anesthesiology
3Realities for the Practicing Anesthesiologist
- More than 35 million people in U.S. are gt 65
- They account for almost half of hospital care
days - 25-35 surgical cases
- Most anesthesiologists are geriatric
anesthesiologists!
4All Geriatric Patients are not Created Equal!
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6People age at different ratesOrgan Function
7Organ Functional ReserveSafety Margin of Organ
Capacity
8Considerations
- Cardiovascular function
- Respiratory function
- Airway Management
- Pharmacokinetics
- Body temperature regulation
- Postoperative Mental function
9CV Changes with Aging
- Connective tissue changes
- Loss of elasticity
- Loss of SA node cells, slowed conduction
- Myocyte death without replacement
- Decreased response to beta-receptor stimulation
10Aging Does Not Diminish
- Intrinsic quality of muscle
- Heart does not weaken with age alone
- Peripheral vasoconstriction
- Enhanced sympathetic nervous system activity at
rest - More prone to hypotension with loss of
sympathetic tone
11Arterial Stiffening
- Reflected pressure from stiffened arteries
increases pressure in aortic root during late
systole - Leads to ventricular hypertrophy, impaired
diastolic filling
12Decreased Venous Compliance
- Veins, like arteries, stiffen with age
- Stiff veins are less able to buffer changes in
blood volume - Volume shifts cause exaggerated changes in
cardiac filling pressure
13Myocyte Death
- Cardiac muscle cells die over time
- Remaining cells do not divide in adequate numbers
in adulthood - Remaining cells hypertrophy to compensate
- Another cause of ventricular hypertrophy
14Ventricular Contraction
- Slows with Aging
- Ventricle may not be fully relaxed during
beginning of diastolic filling phase - Result Early diastolic filling is impaired
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16Dependence on High Filling Pressure
Frank-Starling Curve
17Consequences of Delayed Relaxation
- Late diastolic filling depends on high left
atrial pressure and atrial kick - Tachycardia and atrial fibrillation not well
tolerated - Narrow range between inadequate filling pressure
and fluid overload - Diastolic dysfunction may be the most common
cause of heart failure in gt 75 y/o
18Can the Elderly Heart Increase Output?
19Aging and ContractilityResponse to Exercise
7
0
Young
6
5
Ejection Fraction ()
Elderly
6
0
5
5
At Rest
Maximal Exercise
Stratton et al., Circ 1994891648
20Decreased Beta-Receptor Responsiveness
- Diminished increase in heart rate with stress
- Reduced maximum heart rate
- Increase their stroke volume
- From increase in end diastolic volume
21Response to Anesthesia
- Anesthetics can
- Remove sympathetic tone
- Dramatic when baseline tone is very high
- Directly depress heart, vascular smooth muscle
- Diminish baroreceptor reflexes
22Add to That
- Changes in sympathetic tone from
- waxing and waning surgical stimulus
- variable depth of anesthesia
- Changes in patients volume status
- Results in LABILE BLOOD PRESSURE !
23Summary Volume Dependence of the Elderly Heart
- Elderly heart depends on late filling that in
turn depends on left atrial pressure - Elderly heart is also stiff, so the left atrial
pressure must be high in order to fill the LV - prone to diastolic dysfunction
- poor venous buffering of blood volume makes
maintenance of left atrial pressure difficult
24Summary Decreased Response to Beta-Receptor
Stimulation
- Lessened ability to increase in heart rate
- Lessened ability to increase ejection fraction
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26Aging and Respiratory Function
27Lung VolumesDecreased VC and Increased RV
28Pulmonary Changes
- Decreased thoracic elasticity
- Decreased strength and endurance of respiratory
muscles
29Decreased Efficiency of Gas Exchange
- Breakdown of elastin connections between
connective tissue and alveolar tissue - Results in poor tethering of lung tissue to
airways and other lung tissue - Airways are NOT held open
- Increases
- Shunting
- Dead space
30Increased Shunt
31Explains Effect of Age on paO2
32Pre-oxygenation
- Takes longer in elderly than in healthy young
patients!
33Airway ManagementDiminished Afferentation
- Stimulus threshold for vocal cord closure is
increased - Increased risk of aspiration!
34Airway ManagementChanges with Aging
- Arthritic Changes
- Decreased cervical spine and neck mobility
- Smaller mouth opening
- Smaller glottic opening
- Smaller endotracheal tube
- Fragile teeth
35Remember
- Airway management may be more difficult
- Prone to airway collapse (risk of pneumonia)
- Higher work of breathing (risk of hypercarbia)
- Lower blood oxygen levels(greater need for
supplemental oxygen) - After leaving PACU, hypoxia more likely
- from residual drug/CNS effects
36Geriatric population is at significantly
increased risk of respiratory failure in the
postoperative setting!
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38Pharmacology in the Elderly Patient
39Increased Bolus Drug Effect
- Decreased protein binding
- Higher free, unbound plasma drug levels
- Decreased volume of distribution
- Slower redistribution of drug
- ALL of these INCREASE target organ levels!
- Examples Thiopental, Propofol
40Increased Brain Sensitivity
- Elderly brain is more sensitive to a given CNS
level of a drug - Mechanism ??
41Slowed Drug Metabolism
- Clearance decreases as
- Liver blood flow decreases
- Liver mass decreases
- Kidney function decreases
- Volume of distribution increases with
- Increased body fat
- Decreased albumin levels
42Bolus Drug Strategy for the Elderly
- GO LOW !
- GO SLOW !
- You can always give more!
43Temperature Regulation
- Elderly prone to both hypo-, hyperthermia
- Lower body metabolism
- Decreased ability to change skin blood flow
(less able to hold or get rid of heat) - Hypothermia
- Shivering increases metabolic demand
- Increased risk of myocardial ischemia
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45The Elderly Brain
46CNS Structural Changes
- Brain mass decreases with corresponding
decreased cerebral blood flow - Decreased receptors
- Acetylcholine
- Cholinergic neurons in the basal forebrain
regulate normal memory - Dopamine
- Norepinephrine
47Postoperative Cognitive Disorders
- Delirium
- Mild neurocognitive disorder - POCD
- Dementia (rare)
- Multiple cognitive deficits
- Impairment in activities of daily living
48Postoperative Delirium
- Most common form of perioperative CNS dysfunction
- Acute confusion, decreased alertness,
misperception - Patient may show agitation or withdrawal
- Twice as common in the elderly
- 10-15 of elderly surgical patients
- 30-50 if undergoing cardiac or orthopedic
surgery - Seen after general, regional and MAC anesthetics
- Results in prolonged hospital stay and protracted
postoperative care
49Postoperative DeliriumPredisposing Factors
- Drug withdrawal
- Use of benzodiazepines, tricyclic antidepressants
- Alcohol abuse
- Drug interactions
- Anticholinergics, etc.
- Pre-existing depression or dementia
- Metabolic disturbances
50Can Postoperative Delirium be Prevented?
- Marcantonio (2001) - Reduced postoperative
delirium by 1/3 in hip fracture patients - Minimized benzodiazepines, anticholinergics,
antihistamines, meperidine - Maintained BP greater than 2/3 of baseline
- Maintained O2 saturation gt 90
- Maintained Hct gt 30
- Mobilized patients ASAP
- Provided appropriate environmental stimulation
51Minimizing Postoperative DeliriumTry to Avoid
- Anticholinergics - atropine and scopolamine (NOT
glycopyrrolate) - Ketamine
- Benzodiazepines
- Large doses of barbiturates and Propofol
- Meperidine
52Common Treatable Causes of Postoperative
Delirium
- Hypoxemia
- Hypercarbia
- Hypotension
- Pain
- Sepsis
- Metabolic
53Management of Postoperative Delirium
- Identify cause if possible
- Maintain or restore
- Adequate oxygenation and ventilation
- Normal hemodynamics
- Normal metabolic state
- Drugs
- Benzodiazepines - if alcohol or sedative
withdrawal - Haloperidol (if not contraindicated - i.e.
Parkinsons Disease) - Restraints - to prevent injury
54Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction (POCD)
- Deterioration of intellectual function presenting
as impaired memory or concentration. - Not detected until days or weeks after surgery
- Duration of several weeks to permanent
- Diagnosis is only warranted if
- corroborated with neuropsychological testing and
evidence of greater memory loss than one would
expect due to normal aging
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56Implications of POCD
- Can lead to an abrupt decline in cognitive
function - Ultimately
- Loss of independence
- Withdrawal from society
- Death
Seattle Longitudinal Study of Aging Berlin Aging
Study
57Threshold Theory for Cognitive Decline
Lesion
Lesion
Protective Factor
Brain Reserve Capacity
Case A
Case B
A Protective factor (greater brain reserve
capacity), no impairment B Vulnerability factor
(less brain reserve capacity), impairment
Satz Neuropsychology 1993(7)273.
58International Study of POCD
Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction in
the elderly ISPOCD1 study
JT Moller P Cluitmans LS Rasmussen P Houx H
Rasmussen J Canet P Rabbitt J Jolles K Larsen
CD Hanning O Langeron T Johnson PM Lauven PA
Kristensen A Biedler H van Beem O Fraidakis,
JH Silverstein JEW Beneken JS Gravenstein for
the ISPOCD investigators
- Collaborative research effort
- Members from 8 European countries and USA
- 13 hospitals
- Research conducted from 1994 - 1996
THE LANCET Saturday 21 March 1998 Vol. 351 No.
9106 Pages 857-861
59Incidence of POCD in Patients and
ControlsPatients gt 60 y.o.
Lancet 1998 351857
60A Prospective Study EvaluatingThe Relationship
Between Age and POCD
- Single site - University of Florida 1999 - 2002
- 1200 patients undergoing elective surgery
- Young - 18 to 39 years of age
- Middle-aged - 40 to 59 years of age
- Elderly - 60 years and older
- Controls - primary family members
- Study design identical to ISPOCD study
- Same psychometric test battery
- Outcome Endpoints
- POCD (primary) and mortality (secondary)
Monk et al. Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-50
61The Relationship Between Age and
POCDInclusion/Exclusion Criteria
- Inclusion criteria
- Aged 18 years or older
- General anesthesia gt 2 hrs
- Major abdominal/thoracic or orthopedic surgery
- Mini-Mental Status Exam (MMSE) 24
- Exclusion criteria
- Cardiac or neurosurgical procedures
- CNS disease
- Alcoholism or drug dependence
- Major depression
- Patients not expected to live 3 months or longer
Monk et al. Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-50
62Incidence of POCD in Adult Patients
of Patients
13
p lt 0.05
Monk et al. Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-50
63Predictors of POCD3 Months After Surgery
Monk et al. Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-50
64One Year Mortality Rate and POCD in Elderly
Patients
Monk et al. Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-50
65Independent Multivariate Predictors of One-Year
Mortality
Multivariate c-statistic 0.806 (p lt 0.001)
Monk et al. Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-50
66Is Mortality Data Reproducible?
- Multi-center Prospective Trial (Sweden)
- 5,057 General Anesthetics, Non-cardiac Surgery
- Similar 1 Year Mortality Rate
- Deep anesthesia time is a significant independent
predictor of mortality - Increased Relative Risk 19.7 / hr. vs. 34.1 in
Monks POCD/Mortality Study
Lennmarken et al, Anesthesiology 2003 99A-303
67Laboratory Findings
- Culley (2003) - Found that isoflurane-nitrous
anesthesia without surgery in rats impairs
spatial learning for weeks in elderly rats - Eckenhoff (2004) - Found increased toxicity of
beta-amyloid in cell cultures induced by common
general anesthetics
68POCD Multifactorial?
- Pre-existing cognitive dysfunction
- Complexity and duration of surgery
- Micro emboli
- Inflammation
- Stress, social isolation, immobility
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