The New England journal of medicine

Spinal or General Anesthesia for Hip Surgery in Older Adults

Updated

Abstract

In a trial involving 1600 patients, spinal anesthesia did not show superiority over general anesthesia in terms of survival and walking ability after hip-fracture surgery.

  • The primary composite outcome of death or inability to walk 10 ft independently or with assistance occurred in 18.5% of the spinal anesthesia group and 18.0% of the general anesthesia group.
  • An inability to walk independently at 60 days was reported in 15.2% of the spinal anesthesia group compared to 14.4% of the general anesthesia group.
  • Death within 60 days occurred in 3.9% of patients receiving spinal anesthesia and 4.1% of those receiving general anesthesia.
  • The incidence of postoperative delirium was similar, with 20.5% in the spinal anesthesia group and 19.7% in the general anesthesia group.

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