David G Jacobs1. 1. Department of Surgery, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, North Carolina 28232, USA. david.jacobs@carolinashealthcare.org
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: As the elderly population expands and adopts increasingly more active lifestyles, trauma and critical care practitioners will be faced with providing care for greater numbers of severely injured patients. However, because of their associated preexisting medical conditions and poor relative physiologic reserve, geriatric patients have higher mortality rates and poorer long-term functional outcomes than their younger counterparts. A thorough understanding of the causes for these disparate outcomes is critical if successful strategies and treatments for this unique patient population are to be developed. RECENT FINDINGS: The currently available geriatric trauma literature is largely descriptive and retrospective, and does not provide ready explanations or solutions for the substantially worse outcomes experienced by this patient population. It does appear that outcomes are improved by providing early and aggressive care in designated trauma centers, yet undertriage remains a significant problem. Early admission to an ICU has been recommended, but its benefits remain unproved. Significant differences exist between older and younger patients in injury patterns, and in the frequency and type of complications These differences in turn demand prompt diagnostic approaches, aggressive treatment, and unique prevention strategies. SUMMARY: Ironically, the field of geriatric trauma is still in its infancy. Given the relation between advanced age, associated preexisting medical conditions, and poor physiologic reserve, a poor outcome may be inevitable by the time the geriatric patient presents for medical attention. Greater emphasis should therefore be placed on injury prevention efforts in this patient population. There is a dire need for well-designed prospective studies in geriatric trauma.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: As the elderly population expands and adopts increasingly more active lifestyles, trauma and critical care practitioners will be faced with providing care for greater numbers of severely injured patients. However, because of their associated preexisting medical conditions and poor relative physiologic reserve, geriatric patients have higher mortality rates and poorer long-term functional outcomes than their younger counterparts. A thorough understanding of the causes for these disparate outcomes is critical if successful strategies and treatments for this unique patient population are to be developed. RECENT FINDINGS: The currently available geriatric trauma literature is largely descriptive and retrospective, and does not provide ready explanations or solutions for the substantially worse outcomes experienced by this patient population. It does appear that outcomes are improved by providing early and aggressive care in designated trauma centers, yet undertriage remains a significant problem. Early admission to an ICU has been recommended, but its benefits remain unproved. Significant differences exist between older and younger patients in injury patterns, and in the frequency and type of complications These differences in turn demand prompt diagnostic approaches, aggressive treatment, and unique prevention strategies. SUMMARY: Ironically, the field of geriatric trauma is still in its infancy. Given the relation between advanced age, associated preexisting medical conditions, and poor physiologic reserve, a poor outcome may be inevitable by the time the geriatric patient presents for medical attention. Greater emphasis should therefore be placed on injury prevention efforts in this patient population. There is a dire need for well-designed prospective studies in geriatric trauma.
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