The influence of mode of anaesthesia on perioperative outcomes in people with hip fracture: a prospective cohort study from the National Hip Fracture Database for England, Wales and Northern Ireland

Sep 26, 2022BMC medicine

How Type of Anesthesia May Affect Recovery Around Surgery for Hip Fracture Patients

AI simplified

Abstract

Spinal anaesthesia without sedation is associated with a significantly reduced risk of following hip fracture surgery.

  • Delirium affects up to 50% of patients after hip fracture surgery.
  • Spinal anaesthesia without sedation is linked to a 5% lower risk of delirium compared to general anaesthesia.
  • Patients receiving spinal anaesthesia without sedation are more likely to mobilize on the first day after surgery.
  • This group also shows a higher likelihood of returning to their original residence after discharge.
  • Both spinal anaesthesia methods are associated with shorter hospital stays compared to general anaesthesia.
  • No differences in 30-day mortality rates were found between the anaesthesia groups.

AI simplified

Key numbers

0.95
Decrease in Risk
Odds ratio comparing spinal anaesthesia without sedation to general anaesthesia
1.06
Increase in Day One Mobilisation
Odds ratio for mobilisation on day one post-surgery
−0.45 days
Shorter Length of Stay
Linear regression coefficient indicating length of stay reduction with spinal anaesthesia without sedation

Full Text

What this is

  • This research examines the impact of different anaesthesia methods on outcomes after hip fracture surgery.
  • It focuses on spinal anaesthesia with and without sedation compared to general anaesthesia.
  • Key outcomes include the incidence of , mobilisation on the first postoperative day, length of hospital stay, and discharge destination.

Essence

  • Spinal anaesthesia without sedation reduces the risk of and improves early postoperative outcomes compared to general anaesthesia in hip fracture patients.

Key takeaways

  • Spinal anaesthesia without sedation is linked to a 5% lower risk of compared to general anaesthesia. This association is clinically relevant given the high incidence of in hip fracture patients.
  • Patients receiving spinal anaesthesia without sedation are 6% more likely to mobilise on the first postoperative day and 4% more likely to return to their original residence upon discharge.
  • Both spinal anaesthesia types (with and without sedation) are associated with shorter hospital stays compared to general anaesthesia, suggesting potential benefits for healthcare resource management.

Caveats

  • Causality cannot be established due to the observational nature of the study. Other unmeasured factors may influence outcomes.
  • The analysis did not include details on specific anaesthetic drugs or sedation levels, which could affect results.
  • Missing data on assessments may lead to underreporting of its incidence, impacting the findings.

Definitions

  • Delirium: Acute confusion characterized by fluctuating attention and cognitive impairment, common in older surgical patients.
  • 4AT score: A rapid screening tool for delirium, scoring from 0 to 12; higher scores indicate greater likelihood of delirium.

AI simplified

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • 📚7 fresh studies
  • 📝plain-language summaries
  • direct links to original studies
  • 🏅top journal indicators
  • 📅weekly delivery
  • 🧘‍♂️always free