Agreement Between the Mini-Cog in the Preoperative Clinic and on the Day of Surgery and Association With Postanesthesia Care Unit Delirium: A Cohort Study of Cognitive Screening in Older Adults

Oct 1, 2020Anesthesia and analgesia

Consistency of a Quick Memory Test Before Surgery and on Surgery Day and Its Link to Delirium After Anesthesia in Older Adults

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Abstract

In a cohort of 80 older surgical patients, those with Mini-Cog scores indicating cognitive impairment (≤2) had an estimated 12.8 times higher odds of experiencing postoperative delirium.

  • High agreement was found between Mini-Cog scores from preoperative clinic and surgery-day assessments (κ = 0.78).
  • Ten patients were identified with cognitive impairment based on clinic-day Mini-Cog scores, while 70 were not.
  • The average time between clinic-day and surgery-day Mini-Cog tests was 8.4 days.
  • Both Mini-Cog test scores were highly predictive of postoperative delirium in the postanesthesia care unit.
  • Patients with cognitive impairment as indicated by Mini-Cog scores had significantly increased odds of developing PACU delirium.

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