Cynthia Olotu1, Arved Weimann, Christian Bahrs, Wolfgang Schwenk, Martin Scherer, Rainer Kiefmann. 1. Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Center for Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE); Department of General, Visceral and Oncological Surgery Klinikum St. Georg, Leipzig; Clinic for Trauma and Reconstructive Surgery, BG Hospital, Tübingen; Department of General-, Visceral- and Vascular Surgery, Städtisches Klinikum Solingen gGmbH; Department of General Practice / Primary Care, Center for Psychosocial Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE); Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Rotkreuzklinikum München.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Elderly patients are a growing and vulnerable group with an elevated perioperative risk. Perioperative treatment pathways that take these patients' special risks and requirements into account are often not implemented in routine clinical practice. METHODS: This review is based on pertinent publications retrieved by a selective search in PubMed, the AWMF guideline database, and the Cochrane database for guidelines from Germany and abroad, meta-analyses, and Cochrane reviews. RESULTS: The care of elderly patients who need surgery calls for an interdisciplinary, interprofessional treatment concept. One component of this concept is preoperative preparation of the patient ("prehabilitation"), which is best initiated before hospital admission, e.g., correction of deficiency states, optimization of chronic drug treatment, and respiratory training. Another important component consists of pre-, intra-, and postoperative measures to prevent delirium, which can lower the frequency of this complication by 30-50%: these include orientation aids, avoidance of inappropriate drugs for elderly patients, adequate analgesia, early mobilization, short fasting times, and a perioperative nutrition plan. Preexisting cognitive impairment predisposes to postoperative delirium (odds ratios [OR] ranging from 2.5 to 4.5). Frailty is the most important predictor of the postoperative course (OR: 2.6-11). It follows that preoperative assessment of the patient's functional and cognitive status is essential. CONCLUZION: The evidence-based and guideline-consistent care of elderly patients requires not only close interdisciplinary, interprofessional, and cross-sectoral collaboration, but also the restructuring and optimization of habitual procedural pathways in the hospital. Elderly patients' special needs can only be met by a treatment concept in which the entire perioperative phase is considered as a single, coherent process.
BACKGROUND: Elderly patients are a growing and vulnerable group with an elevated perioperative risk. Perioperative treatment pathways that take these patients' special risks and requirements into account are often not implemented in routine clinical practice. METHODS: This review is based on pertinent publications retrieved by a selective search in PubMed, the AWMF guideline database, and the Cochrane database for guidelines from Germany and abroad, meta-analyses, and Cochrane reviews. RESULTS: The care of elderly patients who need surgery calls for an interdisciplinary, interprofessional treatment concept. One component of this concept is preoperative preparation of the patient ("prehabilitation"), which is best initiated before hospital admission, e.g., correction of deficiency states, optimization of chronic drug treatment, and respiratory training. Another important component consists of pre-, intra-, and postoperative measures to prevent delirium, which can lower the frequency of this complication by 30-50%: these include orientation aids, avoidance of inappropriate drugs for elderly patients, adequate analgesia, early mobilization, short fasting times, and a perioperative nutrition plan. Preexisting cognitive impairment predisposes to postoperative delirium (odds ratios [OR] ranging from 2.5 to 4.5). Frailty is the most important predictor of the postoperative course (OR: 2.6-11). It follows that preoperative assessment of the patient's functional and cognitive status is essential. CONCLUZION: The evidence-based and guideline-consistent care of elderly patients requires not only close interdisciplinary, interprofessional, and cross-sectoral collaboration, but also the restructuring and optimization of habitual procedural pathways in the hospital. Elderly patients' special needs can only be met by a treatment concept in which the entire perioperative phase is considered as a single, coherent process.
Authors: Matthias Pirlich; Tatjana Schütz; Kristina Norman; Sylvia Gastell; Heinrich Josef Lübke; Stephan C Bischoff; Ulrich Bolder; Thomas Frieling; Helge Güldenzoph; Kristian Hahn; Karl-Walter Jauch; Karin Schindler; Jürgen Stein; Dorothee Volkert; Arved Weimann; Hansjörg Werner; Christiane Wolf; Gudrun Zürcher; Peter Bauer; Herbert Lochs Journal: Clin Nutr Date: 2006-05-15 Impact factor: 7.324
Authors: E Kalbe; J Kessler; P Calabrese; R Smith; A P Passmore; M Brand; R Bullock Journal: Int J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2004-02 Impact factor: 3.485
Authors: M J Kaiser; J M Bauer; C Ramsch; W Uter; Y Guigoz; T Cederholm; D R Thomas; P Anthony; K E Charlton; M Maggio; A C Tsai; D Grathwohl; B Vellas; C C Sieber Journal: J Nutr Health Aging Date: 2009-11 Impact factor: 4.075
Authors: Christian Jung; Raphael Romano Bruno; Bernhard Wernly; Georg Wolff; Michael Beil; Malte Kelm Journal: Dtsch Arztebl Int Date: 2020-10-02 Impact factor: 5.594