Title: Preoperative Assessment in the Older Adult
1Preoperative Assessment in the Older Adult
- Lisa Caruso, MD, MPH
- Section of Geriatrics
- Boston University Medical Center
2Goals
- To review the most common physiologic changes in
the elderly which may impair ones ability to
compensate for operative stress - To describe the purpose of the preoperative
assessment - To provide strategies to minimize operative risks
3Cardiovascular System
- Changes in mechanics
- Decrease in myocytes, increase in collagen
resulting in decreased compliance - Autonomic tissue replaced by collagen resulting
in conduction abnormalities - Decreased compliance of vascular system leading
to increased systolic blood pressure with
resulting ventricular hypertrophy
4Cardiovascular System
- Changes in control mechanisms
- decreased responsiveness to catacholamines due
probably to impaired receptor function - decreased heart rate response to changes in
circulatory volume may lead to congestive heart
failure or hypotension (COSV x HR gtpreload
dependency)
5Pulmonary System
- Reduced chest wall compliance resulting in
- increased work of breathing
- reduced maximal minute ventilation
- Reduced respiratory response to hypoxia by 50 (?
Due to impaired chemoreceptor function) - Decreased ciliary function
- Reduced cough and swallowing function
6Neurologic Changes
- Decrease in cortical gray matter, neuronal
volume, complexity of neuronal connections,
synthesis of neurotransmitters - Neuronal loss and demyelination occur in the
spinal cord resulting in changes in reflexes and
reductions in proprioception - Vision and hearing loss make information
processing more difficult
7Renal Changes
- Decline in renal blood flow--10 per decade after
age 50 - Old kidney has difficulty
- maintaining circulating blood volume
- with sodium homeostasis
- removing excess acid
- adjusting to hypovolemia, hemorrhage, low cardiac
output and hypotension - Renal insufficiency may not be appreciated
8Adverse Drug Reactions (ADR)
- Decrease in lean body mass with increased
proportion of body fat - Decreased protein binding of certain drugs
- Alterations in renal, CV, hepatic function may
change drug concentrations and their duration of
action - ADRs increase with number of drugs administered
and linearly with age
9(No Transcript)
10Preoperative Assessment--Purposes
- Not just for clearance
- To identify factors associated with increased
risks of specific complications related to a
procedure - To recommend a management plan to minimize these
risks
Cassel CK, Leipzig RM, Cohen HJ, et al. Geriatric
Medicine An Evidence Based Approach, 4th ed. New
York Springer 2003.
11Preoperative Assessment--Components
- Functional Assessment
- Cognitive Assessment
- Nutritional Assessment
- Review of advance directives
- whether and when to withhold or withdraw support
12Functional Assessment
- American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score
- Class I A normal healthy patient for elective
operation - Class II A patient with mild systemic disease
- Class III A patient with severe systemic disease
that limits activity but is not incapacitating - Class IV A patient with incapacitating systemic
disease that is a constant threat to life - Class V A moribund patient that is not expected
to survive 24 hrs with or without the operation
13Functional Assessment
- Exercise capacity
- inactive defined as inability to leave the home
on ones own at least twice per week - increased CV risk in patients unable to meet a
4-MET demand during most daily activities - Activities of Daily Living
- Correlated with post-op morbidity and mortality
14Cognitive Assessment
- Not done uniformly
- Dementia is a major predictor of post-op delirium
- Use of Mini-Mental State Exam or orientation and
recall testing - Much potential for future research
15Nutritional Assessment
- Poor nutrition is a risk factor for
- pneumonia
- poor wound-healing
- 30-day mortality
- Hypoalbuminemia (lt3.3mg/dL)
- increased length of stay
- increased rates of readmission
- unfavorable disposition
- increased all-cause mortality
Corti M. Serum albumin level and physical
disability as predictors of mortality in older
persons.JAMA 19942721036.
16Strategies to Minimize Risk
- Routine screening is low yield
- preop testing should be based on the type of
surgery - Manage hypertension
- lower blood pressure to under 180/110
- In patients with dementia, consider placement of
epidural to control pain without sedation thus
minimizing risk for delirium - Avoid long periods without nutrition
- little evidence, but should try to improve
nutritional status prior to elective surgery
17Strategies to Minimize Risk
- Perioperative use of ß-blockers
- Mangano, et al., NEJM 1996, RDBPCT
- In patients with or at risk for CAD, does IV
atenolol decrease periop CV morbidity and
increase overall survival? - Cardiac RF included age gt 65, hypertension,
smoking, cholesterol gt 240, and diabetes. - 200 pts enrolled IV atenolol 10 mg given 30 min
prior to surgery, 50-100 mg bid POD 1-7 - 192 followed for 2 yrs
18Strategies to Minimize Risk
Event-free survival after hospital discharge at 2
years was 68 in the placebo group and 83 in the
atenolol group (p0.008). Not clear yet if age
alone is an indication for use of ß-blockers in
perioperative period.
19Strategies to Minimize Risk
- Diabetic Postoperative Mortality and Morbidity
(DIPOM) study - Perioperative Ischemic Evaluation (POISE) trial
- Metoprolol after Vascular Surgery (MaVS) trial
Http//www.medscape.com/viewarticle/494679
20Reuben DB, et al. Geriatrics at Your Fingertips
2005, 7th edition. New York, American Geriatrics
Society, 2005.
21Summary
- Older adults have decreased reserves in multiple
organ systems. - Disease burden and functional capacity outweigh
age when assessing preoperative risk. - Collaboration among providers helps to identify
functional, cognitive and nutritional deficits
and to create management plans to minimize these
deficits when possible.