| Literature DB >> 31881996 |
Jillian C Belrose1, Ruediger R Noppens2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The impact of general anesthesia on cognitive impairment is controversial and complex. A large body of evidence supports the association between exposure to surgery under general anesthesia and development of delayed neurocognitive recovery in a subset of patients. Existing literature continues to debate whether these short-term effects on cognition can be attributed to anesthetic agents themselves, or whether other variables are causative of the observed changes in cognition. Furthermore, there is conflicting data on the relationship between anesthesia exposure and the development of long-term neurocognitive disorders, or development of incident dementia in the patient population with normal preoperative cognitive function. Patients with pre-existing cognitive impairment present a unique set of anesthetic considerations, including potential medication interactions, challenges with cooperation during assessment and non-general anesthesia techniques, and the possibility that pre-existing cognitive impairment may impart a susceptibility to further cognitive dysfunction. MAIN BODY: This review highlights landmark and recent studies in the field, and explores potential mechanisms involved in perioperative cognitive disorders (also known as postoperative cognitive dysfunction, POCD). Specifically, we will review clinical and preclinical evidence which implicates alterations to tau protein, inflammation, calcium dysregulation, and mitochondrial dysfunction. As our population ages and the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia continues to increase, we require a greater understanding of potential modifiable factors that impact perioperative cognitive impairment.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Anesthesia; Dementia; Desflurane; Elderly; Isoflurane; Neurocognitive disorder; Postoperative cognitive dysfunction; Propofol; Sevoflurane
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881996 PMCID: PMC6933922 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-019-0903-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Nomenclature used for cognitive impairment at different perio-operative time periods
| Time Period | Nomenclature | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Preoperative | Mild Neurocognitive Disorder (NCD) | DSM-5 definition: (1) cognitive concern from the individual/informant/clinician + (2) objective evidence of decline of 1–2 SD compared to normative group + (3) maintained iADLs &/or ADLs |
| Major NCD | DSM-5 definition: (1) cognitive concern from the individual/informant/clinician + (2) objective evidence of decline of ≥2 SD + (3) impaired iADLs &/or ADLs | |
| Emergence | Emergence excitation or delirium | |
| After operation to postoperative day 30 | Postoperative delirium | Fluctuating changes in attention, mental status, or level of consciousness which occur in hospital up to 1 week following surgery |
| Delayed neurocognitive recovery | Cognitive decline meeting DSM-5 criteria for mild or major NCD, diagnosed within the 30 day recovery period | |
| From expected recovery (30 days) to 12 months | Postoperative mild neurocognitive disorder (POCD) Postoperative major NCD (POCD) | Criteria as per DSM-5 for mild and major NCD Assumes decline cannot be accounted for by any other condition. Postoperative specifier implies temporal relationship. It does not imply causation. POCD is included as a specifier in parentheses while transitioning to the new nomenclature |
| Greater than 12 months postoperatively | Routine DSM-5 nomenclature | Postoperative specifier is NO LONGER attached if neurocognitive disorder is first diagnosed after this time. |
The above nomenclature has been recently proposed to further define neurocognitive disorders associated with the perioperative period. Abbreviations: DSM-5 diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, NCD neurocognitive disorder, SD standard deviation, iADL instrumental activities of daily living, ADL activities of daily living; Objective evidence: tests of complex attention, executive function, learning and memory, language, perceptual-motor, or social cognition. Objective evidence cannot be limited to screening tools. This table is adapted from Evered et al. (2018) [7]