Title: ANESTHETIC MANAGEMENT OF THE ELDERLY PATIENT
1ANESTHETIC MANAGEMENT OF THE ELDERLY PATIENT
- Raymond C. Roy, PhD, MD
- Professor Chair of Anesthesiology
- Wake Forest University Health Sciences
- Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1009
- rroy_at_wfubmc.edu
2ONE VIEW OF AGING
- Because modern humans, unlike feral animals,
have learned how to escape death long after
reproductive success, we have revealed a process
that, teleologically, was never intended for us
to experience. - Leonard Hayflick
3LIFE SPANGuinness Book of Records
- Oldest man - 120 yrs 237 days
- Oldest woman - 122 yrs 164 days
4LIFE EXPECTANCYat birth USA 1997
- WOMEN
- Caucasian 79.9
- African-American 74.7
- MEN
- Caucasian 74.3
- African-American 67.2
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7OLDEST SURGICAL PATIENTOliver. Br J Anaesth
2000 84260
- 113 y/o woman
- Femoral fracture
- General
- CVP, no arterial-line
- Extubation in ICU 5 h postop
- Hospital discharge POD 23
8ANESTHETIC FREQUENCYAdministrations/100 people
(FRANCE)Clergue. Anesthesiology 1999911509
- WOMEN
- 35-44 yrs 13.2
- 75-84 yrs 23.6
- MEN
- 35-44 yrs 8.9
- 75-84 yrs 30.2
9AGE AND ANESTHESIA AND SURGICAL OUTCOME
- WITH ADVANCING AGE
- MORTALITY MORBIDITY INCREASE
- STEEP INCREASE gt 75 yrs
- CAUSE DISEASE or AGE?
- DISEASE gt AGE if lt 85 yrs
- AGE APPROACHES DISEASE gt 85 yrs (age of natural
death)
10VASCULAR SURGERYMORTALITY vs AGEFleisher.
Anesth Analg 1999 89849
11PERIOPERATIVE COMPLICATION RATES IN MEDICARE
PATIENTS
- INTERMEDIATE RISK - 42
- Silber Anesthesiology 2000 93152 - 217,440
general orthopedic surgery patients - LOW RISK - 3
- Schein N Engl J Med 2000 342168 - 18,901
cataract surgery patients
12ANESTHETIC CONCERNS IN OLDER PATIENTS
- ROUTINE PREOPERATIVE TESTS
- BETA-ADRENERGIC BLOCKADE
- PRE-OXYGENATION
- PROPOFOL INDUCTIONS
13ANESTHETIC CONCERNS IN OLDER PATIENTS
- SHORTER-ACTING RELAXANTS
- MINIMUM DIASTOLIC PRESSURE
- TRANSFUSION TRIGGER
- EMERGENCE TIME
14ANESTHETIC CONCERNS IN OLDER PATIENTS
- REGIONAL vs. GENERAL
- SEDATION DURING SPINAL/EPIDURAL
- POSTOPERATIVE ANALGESIA
15WHY PREOP TESTING?
- SCREENING - NO
- TREATMENT EFFECTIVENESS - YES
- BASELINE MAYBE
- RISK ASSESSMENT - YES
16PREVALENCE OF ABNORMAL PREOPERATIVE TESTS IN 544
CONSECUTIVE NONCARDIAC SURGICAL PATIENTS gt 69
YEARS? Dzankic. Anesth Analg 2001 93301
- Creatinine gt 1.5 mg/dL 12
- Hemoglobin lt 10 mg/dL 10
- Glucose gt 200 mg/dL 7
- K lt 3.5 mEq/L 5
- K gt 5.0 mEq/L 4
- Platelets lt 115,000/ml 2
17VALUE OF PREOPERATIVE TESTING BEFORE CATARACT
(LOW RISK) SURGERY Schein. N Engl J Med 2000
342168
18VALUE OF PREOPERATIVE TESTING BEFORE CATARACT
(LOW RISK) SURGERY Schein. N Engl J Med 2000
342168
- Tests should be ordered only when the history or
a finding on a physical examination would have
indicated the need for the test even if surgery
had not been planned.
19OUTCOMES OF PATIENTS WITH NO LABORATORY
ASSESSMENT FOR INTERMEDIATE RISKSURGERY N
1,044Narr. Mayo Clin Proc 1997 72505
- Patients assessed by history and physical
examination safely undergo operation with
tests drawn only as indicated intraoperatively
and postoperatively.
20NO NON-INVASIVE OR INVASIVE CARDIAC TESTING FOR
INTERMEDIATE RISK SURGERY
- MODERATE FUNCTIONAL CAPACITY INTERMEDIATE
CLINICAL PREDICTORS - OR
- POOR FUNCTIONAL CAPACITY MINOR CLINICAL
PREDICTORS - J Am Coll Cardiol 1996 27910
21INTERMEDIATE RISK NONCARDIAC SURGERY(Mortality gt
1, lt 5)
- CAROTID
- HEAD NECK
- INTRAPERITONEAL
- INTRATHORACIC
- ORTHOPEDIC
- PROSTATE
22MINOR CLINICAL PREDICTORS
- ADVANCED AGE
- ABNORMAL ECG
- NON-SINUS RHYTHM
- LOW FUNCTIONAL CAPACITY
- STROKE HISTORY
- UNCONTROLLED BP
23INTERMEDIATE CLINICAL PREDICTORS
- MILD STABLE ANGINA
- PRIOR MI
- COMPENSATED CHF
- PRIOR CHF
- DIABETES MELLITUS
24FUNCTIONAL CAPACITY
- MET METABOLIC EQUIVALENT O2 CONSUMPTION OF 70
kg, 40 y/o MAN IN RESTING STATE - gt 7 METs - excellent
- 4-7 METs - moderate
- lt 4 METs - poor
- J Am Coll Cardiol 1996 27910-48
25ESTIMATED ENERGY REQUIREMENTS FOR ADL
- 1 MET -------------------------gt 4 METs
- eat, dress, use toilet
- walk indoors around house
- walk 1-2 blocks on level ground
- light house work
26ESTIMATED ENERGY REQUIREMENTS for ADL
- 4 METs -------------------gt 10 METs
- climb flight of stairs, walk up a hill
- walk briskly on level ground
- run a short distance
- do heavy house work
- golf, bowling, dancing, doubles tennis
27IS ROUTINE LABORATORY TESTING INDICATED FOR OLDER
PATIENTS?Fleisher. Anesth Analg 2001 93249
- There is insufficient evidence either to
advocate routinely performing any given test or
to clearly define preoperative tests that are
without value.
28MORE PREOPERATIVE ASSESSMENT BY PHYSICIANS LESS
LABORATORY TESTSRoizen. N Engl Med 2000 342204
- Without changes to the system to increase
preoperative clinical assessment by physicians,
we may see poorer patient outcomes and higher
long term costs.
29IS ROUTINE PREOPERATIVE TESTING IN THE ELDERLY
INDICATED?
- NO, IF
- FOLLOWED BY PRIMARY CARE MD
- GOOD H P WITH NO RED FLAGS
- MODERATE FUNCTIONAL STATUS INTERMEDIATE SURGERY
- OR
- POOR BUT STABLE FUNCTIONAL STATUS LOW RISK
SURGERY
30LEAST USEFUL ROUTINE PREOPERATIVE TESTS IN OLDER
PATIENTS
- CHEST X-RAY
- PT and PTT in patients not receiving heparin or
warfarin - LIVER FUNCTION TESTS
31BETA-ADRENERGIC-BLOCKING DRUGS. INCREDIBLY
USEFUL, INCREDIBLY UNDERUTILIZED
- DAVID C. WARLTIER, MD, PhD
- EDITORIAL
- Anesthesiology 1998 882-5
32PERIOPERATIVE MYOCARDIAL ISCHEMIAWallace.
Anesthesiology 1998 887
33BETA-ADRENERGIC BLOCKADE
- THERAPEUTIC TARGET
- PROVEN INDICATIONS TO ADD
- PROVEN INDICATIONS TO MAINTAIN
- UNCLEAR INDICATIONS
- POSSIBLE ANESTHETIC BENEFITS
34PERIOPERATIVEBETA-BLOCKADETHERAPEUTIC TARGET
- HEART RATE 55 65 bpm
- SYSTOLIC BP gt100 mm Hg
- BEFORE, DURING, AFTER SURGERY
35ADDING PERIOPERATIVEBETA-BLOCKADE PROVEN
INDICATIONSAuerbach. JAMA 2002 2871435
- HIGH RISK 3 MAJOR CRITERIA
- INTERMEDIATE RISK ANY 2 MINOR OR 1-2 MAJOR
CRITERIA
36CARDIAC RISK INDEXMAJOR CRITERIAAuerbach. JAMA
20022871435
- HIGH RISK SURGERY
- ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE
- TIA, CVA
- IDDM
- CREATININE gt 2.0
37CARDIAC RISK INDEXMINOR CRITERIAAuerbach. JAMA
20022871435
- gt 64 yrs
- HYPERTENSION
- CURRENT SMOKER
- ELEVATED CHOLESTEROL
- NIDDM
38MAINTAINING PERIOPERATIVEBETA-BLOCKADE PROVEN
INDICATION
- CHRONIC BETA-BLOCKER THERAPY
39PERIOPERATIVEBETA-BLOCKADE UNCLEAR INDICATIONS
- ADDITIONAL DOSE WHEN AT TARGET
- AORTIC STENOSIS
- CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURE
- REGIONAL ANESTHESIA
- NON-SELECTIVE vs BETA-1 SELECTIVE
- LOW RISK PATIENTS
40PRACTICE vs EVIDENCED-BASED BETA-BLOCKADEWrong
Answers from ABA Oral Examinees
- DID NOT ADD IN PREOP CLINIC
- USED HR 80 AS TARGET INTRAOP
- DID NOT ORDER POSTOP (7 days)
- ASSUMED ESMOLOL-BOLUS LONG-ACTING PRE-, INTRA-,
POSTOP - (REACTIVE vs PROPHYLACTIC)
41PERIOPERATIVE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTIONS
- MOST OCCUR ON DAY OF SURGERY
- CARDIAC TROPONIN I LOWER IN BETA-BLOCKED PATIENTS
- Zaugg. Anesthesiology 1999 911674
42FREQUENCY OF NEW T-WAVE CHANGES IN PACU?
- Breslow. Anesthesiology 1986 64 398
- 18 of 394 consecutive patients
- Young old, regional general
- 46 flattening 25 - inversion
- No S/S of myocardial ischemia
43FREQUENCY OF NEW T-WAVE CHANGES IN PACU?
- Ashton. J Am Geriatr Soc 1991 39 575
- 21 of 206 TURP patients
- No S/S of myocardial ischemia
- No elevations of CK-MB
44SIGNIFICANCE OF T-WAVE CHANGES IN PACU?
- OCCUR IN PATIENTS WITHOUT CAD
- ELDERLY - NON-TEXTBOOK SIGNS SYMPTOMS OF
ISCHEMIA - NO WORKUP IF NO OTHER SOFT SIGNS
- WORKUP IF ANY RHYTHM OR HEMODYMAMIC CHANGE
45PERIOPERATIVEBETA-BLOCKADE POSSIBLEANESTHESTIC
BENEFITSSecondary ObservationsZaugg.
Anesthesiology 1999 911674
- DECREASED ANESTHETIC REQUIREMENTS
- FASTER EMERGENCE
- DECREASED ANALGESIC REQUIREMENTS
46WHY IS PREOXYGENATION MORE IMPORTANT IN OLDER
THAN YOUNGER PATIENTS?
- FASTER DESATURATION
- SLOWER ONSET OF RELAXANTS
- HIGHER INCIDENCE OF CAD
47DESATURATION TIME (sec) to SpO2 90Benumof.
Anesthesiology 1999 91 603
48DESATURATION TIME (sec) to SpO2 95Baraka.
Anesthesiology 1999 91 612
49SUCCINYLCHOLINE AGING1 mg/kgKoscielniak-Nelson
. Anesthesiology 1993 79229
50VECURONIUM AGING0.1 mg/kgKoscielniak-Nelson.
Anesthesiology 1993 79229
51BEST WAY TO PRE-OXYGENATE OLDER
PATIENTS? Benumof. Anesthesiology 1999 91
603 Baraka. Anesthesiology 1999 91 612
- 8 DEEP BREATHS in 60 s
- at 10 L/min O2 flow rate
52PROPOFOL INDUCTIONS 25 81 YRSSchnider.
Anesthesiology 1999 901502
- DOSE
- 2 mg/kg lt 65 yrs, 1 mg/kg gt 64 yrs
- Injection time 13 24 s
- LOSS OF CONSCIOUSNESS
- Young old 40 s
- RETURN OF CONSCIOUSNESS
- 30 yrs 6 min, 75 yrs 10 min
53PROPOFOL INDUCTIONS 20 84 YRSKazama.
Anesthesiology 1999 901517
- HALF-TIME FOR NADIR IN BP
- 20 29 yrs 5.7 min
- 70 85 yrs 10.2 min
54PROPOFOL INDUCTIONS gt 65 YRSHabib. Br J Anaesth
2002 88430
- INDUCTION
- GLYCOPYRROLATE
- PROPOFOL 1 mg/kg
- ALFENTANIL 10 µg/kg or
- REMIFENTANIL 0.5 µg/kg 0.1 µg/kg/min
- SYSTOLIC BP
- lt 100 mm Hg 50
- lt 80 mm Hg 8
55PROPOFOL INDUCTIONSgt 65 YRS
- BOLUS DOSE (lt 30 s)
- No concurrent drugs 1.5 mg/kg
- Concurrent drugs 1.0 mg/kg
- HYPOTENSION
- Continues for 10 min after injection
- SLOWER INJECTION (12 min)
- Less hypotension, LOC with lt 1.0 mg/kg
56ANESTHETIC INDUCTIONgt 65 yrs
- MASK
- DECREASED AIRWAY REFLEXES IN ELDERLY
- BP STABILITY MASK gt IV INDUCTIONS
- Kirkbride et al. Br J Anaesth 200187166P
- SEVOFLURANE NOT JUST FOR KIDS
57SHORTER-ACTING NEUROMUSCULAR BLOCKING AGENTS
- Prefer ROCURONIUM or CISATRACURIUM to VECURONIUM
or PANCURONIUM in elderly patients - EVIDENCED-BASED STUDIES
- THEORETICAL REASONS
58SHORTER gt LONGER-ACTING NEUROMUSCULAR BLOCKERS
- EVIDENCED-BASED
- SHORTER PACU STAYS
- Ballantyne. Anesth Analg 1997 85476
- FEWER POSTOP PULMONARY COMPLICATIONS
- Berg. Acta Anaesth Scand 1997 411095
- PROLONGED ACTION IF HYPOTHERMIC
- Caldwell. Anesthesiology 2000 9284
59INTRAOPERATIVE HYPOTHERMIAWho Is at Risk?
- Diabetic Neuropathy
- Kitamura. Anesthesiology 2000 92 1131
- High spinal
- Core T (oC) 34.37 0.15 (T dermatome)
- Frank. Anesthesiology 2000 92 1330
- Advanced age
- Core T (oC) 36.72 0.03 (age in yrs)
- Frank. Anesthesiology 2000 92 1330
60EFFECT OF HYPOTHERMIA ON TIME TO 25 RECOVERY
Vecuronium 0.1 mg/kg Caldwell.
Anesthesiology 2000 92 84
61SHORTER gt LONGER-ACTING NEUROMUSCULAR BLOCKERS
- THEORETICAL
- DECREASED RENAL FUNCTION
- DOSING mg/kg IN OBESE
62OLD OBESE (BMI gt 29.9)Flegal. JAMA 2002
2881723
- 1990 2000
- MEN
- 60-69 yrs 24.8 38.1
- 70-79 20.0 28.9
- 80 8.0 9.6
- WOMEN
- 60-69 yrs 29.8 42.5
- 70-79 25.0 31.9
- 80 15.1 19.5
63MINIMUM DIASTOLIC PRESSURE
- WHEN TREATING SYSTOLIC HYPERTENSION, KEEP
DIASTOLIC PRESURE - WITHIN 10 BASELINE
- GREATER THAN 60 mm Mg
64TRANSFUSION TRIGGER
- HCT 30-33
- ELDERLY
- MYOCARDIAL ISCHEMIA
- Wu. N Engl J Med 20023451230
65ELDERLY TAKE LONGER TO EMERGE THAN YOUNGER
PATIENTS
- LOWER MACawake
- HIGHER PAIN THRESHOLD
- HYPOTHERMIA MORE LIKELY
- EMERGENCE HYPERTENSION
- RELUCTANCE TO TURN OFF VAPORIZER
- LONGER DURATIONS OF ACTION
- RELATIVE DRUG OVERDOSES
66ALVEOLAR CONCENTRATIONS UNDERESTIMATE BRAIN
CONCENTRATIONS DURING EMERGENCE FROM ISFLURANE
Lockhart. Anesthesiology 1991 74 575
67REGIONAL VS GENERAL
- MORTALITY MORBIDITY
- REGIONAL GENERAL
- STUDIES (Christopherson Bode)
- BP, HR TIGHTLY CONTROLLED
- HARDER TO CONTROL IN G/A GROUP
- REGIONAL lt GENERAL
- REAL WORLD
- BP, HR NOT TIGHTLY CONTROLLED
- Rogers et al. Br Med J 20003211493
68DOES EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA REDUCE MAC? Yes, by
50! Hodgson. Anesthesiology 1999 91 1687
69DOES EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA REDUCE MAC-BIS50? Yes,
by 34! Hodgson. Anesthesiology 2001 94
799
70DOES SPINAL OR EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA AFFECT
SEDATIVE REQUIREMENTS? YES!
- Sedation, sleep, and lower BIS scores in patients
during spinal anesthesia without iv sedation - Pollock. Anesthesiology 2000 93 728
- Gentili. Br J Anaesth 1998 93 970
71DOES SPINAL OR EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA AFFECT
SEDATIVE REQUIREMENTS? YES!
- 30 50 DECREASE IN DOSE OF MIDAZOLAM,
THIOPENTAL, OR PROPOFOL TO PRODUCE LOC DURING
SPINAL OR EPIDURAL - Tverskoy. J Clin Anesth 1994 6 487
- Ben-David. Anesth Analg 1995 81 525
- Tverskoy. Reg Anesth 1996 21 209
72IS SEDATION ROUTINELY REQUIRED IN ELDERLY
PATIENTS DURING SPINAL OR EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA?
- DECREASED SEDATIVE REQUIREMENTS
- Age, spinal or epidural
- SYNERGISTIC DRUG INTERACTIONS
- Easy to overdose
- INADEQUATE BLOCK
- Increased cardiac complications
- ENDPOINT IF WILL SLEEP ANYWAY?
73POSTOPERATIVE TITRATION OF INTRAVENOUS MORPHINE
IN THE ELDERLY PATIENT Abrun. Anesthesiology
2002 9617
- Bolus q 5 min to VAS 30 mm
- 2 mg if lt60 kg 3 mg if gt 60 kg
- Total mg/kg dose young old
- Young (lt 70, mean 45) vs Old (gt 70, mean 76)
- Morbidity young old
- adverse opioid effects, sedation, stopped
titrations
74AGE IS NOT AN IMPEDIMENT TO EFFECTIVE USE OF
PCAGagliese. Anesthesiology 2000 93601
- RELIEF young old
- TOTAL DOSE old lt young
75PREEMPTIVE ANALGESIAPREVENT SPINAL CORD WINDUP
- PERIPHERAL NERVE BLOCKS
- NMDA ANTAGONISTS
- ketamine 0.15 mg/kg Mg 30 mg/kg methadone
dextromethorphan - SYSTEMIC LIDOCAINE
- NSAIDs COX-2 INHIBITORS
76SYSTEMIC LOCAL ANESTHETICS
- IV -gt DECREASED POSTOP PAIN
- Koppert, et al. Perioperative intravenous
lidocaine reduces postoperative morphine
consumption after abdominal surgery.
Anesthesiology 2001 95 A-855 - Groudine, et al. Intravenous lidocaine speeds
the return of bowel function, decreases
postoperative pain, and shortens hospital stay in
patients undergoing radical retropubic
prostatectomy. Anesth Analg 1998 86 235-9.
77A DOZEN WAYS TO IMPROVE ANESTHESIA IN OLDER
PATIENTS
- H P gt PREOP TESTING gt CXR, PT, PTT
- BETA-BLOCKERS TO HR 55-65
- TIMELY ANTIBIOTIC ADMINISTRATION
- PRE-OXYGENATE 8 DB/60 sec
- LOWER PROPOFOL DOSES
- SHORTER-ACTING MUSCLE RELAXANTS
78A DOZEN WAYS TO IMPROVE ANESTHESIA IN OLDER
PATIENTS
- HIGHER FIO2s CONSIDER 100
- TRANSFUSION TRIGGER HCT 30
- LOWER BRAIN CONCENTRATIONS AT EMERGENCE
- REDUCE POSTOP OPIOID REQUIREMENTS
- REDUCE SEDATIVE DOSES DURING SPINAL OR EPIDURAL
- JOIN SAGA
79SOCIETY FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF GERIATRIC
ANESTHESIA (SAGA)
- Educational Scientific Exhibit 14
- Offspring of ASA Committee
- Alec Rooke, MD, President
- Rooke_at_u.washington.edu