The influence of anesthetic techniques on postoperative cognitive function in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture surgery: General vs spinal anesthesia

Dec 12, 2018Injury

How General and Spinal Anesthesia May Affect Thinking Skills After Hip Surgery in Older Adults

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Abstract

In a study of 70 elderly patients undergoing hip fracture surgery, 27% receiving subarachnoid anesthesia experienced postoperative delirium compared to 12% receiving general anesthesia.

  • Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) occurred in over 40% of elderly patients after hip surgery.
  • No significant differences in cognitive function were found between patients receiving general and subarachnoid anesthesia based on neuropsychological testing.
  • A decline in daily living activities was observed in the subarachnoid anesthesia group compared to the general anesthesia group at 30 days post-surgery.
  • The subarachnoid anesthesia group showed a significant decline in performance on the Color-Word Task test both at baseline and 30 days postoperatively.

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