What Do Cancer Surgery and orthopedic Surgery Elderly Patients Have in Common? A Long-term Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction in Orthopedic and Cancer Patients Original Research.

IF 2.9 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Neuroscience Insights Pub Date : 2024-02-11 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26331055231220906
Kalliopi Megari, Evanthia Thomaidou, Georgios A Kougioumtzis, Maria Theodoratou, Dimitra Katsarou, Eleni Karlafti, Matthaios Didaggelos, Daniel Paramythiotis, Eleni Argyriadou
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Abstract

Objectives-background: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) involves decline in several cognitive domains after surgery and is particularly common after cardiac surgery, while also common among other types of surgery. Given the potential effects of such cognitive dysfunction on the quality of life, it is important to study it in multiple populations in order to limit its occurrence.

Study design: We present the long-term neuropsychological outcome of 200 patients, 100 of whom had orthopedic surgery and 100 oncological surgery.

Methods: We administered a series of neuropsychological tests assessing attention, complex scanning, verbal working memory, executive functioning, short-term and long-term memory, and visuospatial perception before surgery, prior to discharge, at 3-month follow-up and 6 years after surgery. We compared the performance of these patients to normative datasets.

Results: Despite equivalent levels of pre-surgery performance between patients, oncology patients exceeded their preoperative neurocognitive levels, suggesting less postoperative cognitive dysfunction in orthopedic patients overall, in all neuropsychological domains at a 6-year follow-up, except short-term retention. In contrast, orthopedic patients showed no improvement, and, instead, showed some cognitive decline, which remained consistent over time.

Conclusions: Our findings highlight the critical role of the type of surgery utilized in the development of POCD and have implications for clinical management and patients' quality of life in the very long term. Health policy professionals should be aware that patients' low POCD may persist in the long term, and this is useful from a clinician's point of view.

癌症手术和骨科手术老年患者的共同点是什么?骨科和癌症患者术后长期认知功能障碍的原创性研究。
目标-背景:术后认知功能障碍(POCD)包括术后多个认知领域的功能下降,在心脏手术后尤为常见,但在其他类型的手术中也很常见。鉴于这种认知功能障碍对生活质量的潜在影响,因此必须对多种人群进行研究,以限制其发生:研究设计:我们介绍了 200 名患者的长期神经心理学结果,其中 100 名患者接受了骨科手术,100 名患者接受了肿瘤外科手术:我们在手术前、出院前、术后 3 个月随访和术后 6 年进行了一系列神经心理学测试,对注意力、复杂扫描、言语工作记忆、执行功能、短期和长期记忆以及视觉空间感知进行了评估。我们将这些患者的表现与常模数据集进行了比较:结果:尽管不同患者手术前的表现水平相当,但肿瘤患者的神经认知能力超过了手术前的水平,这表明骨科患者术后认知功能障碍总体较少,在6年随访中,除短期保持外,骨科患者在所有神经心理学领域的表现都很好。与此相反,骨科患者的认知能力没有得到改善,反而出现了一定程度的下降,而且随着时间的推移,这种情况仍在持续:我们的研究结果凸显了手术类型在 POCD 发展过程中的关键作用,并对临床管理和患者的长期生活质量产生了影响。医疗政策专业人员应该意识到,患者的低POCD可能会长期存在,这对临床医生的工作很有帮助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuroscience Insights
Neuroscience Insights Neuroscience-Neuroscience (all)
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
9 weeks
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