Cottrell James E, Hartung John
State University of New York at Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Mt Sinai J Med. 2012 Jan-Feb;79(1):75-94. doi: 10.1002/msj.21283.
The assumption that anesthesia has no serious, long-term, adverse central nervous system consequences may be true for most patients between 6 months and 60 years of age. However, for patients younger than 6 months or older than 60 years, that status quo assumption is under challenge from a growing body of evidence. Fetuses and newborns appear to be at risk because systems that would enable them to fully recover from the effects of more than 2 hours of anesthesia are still in development. In distinction, the elderly appear to be at risk because systems that once enabled them to fully recover have ever-diminishing capacity. Even for those between the age of 6 months and 60 years, full recovery may require replacing apoptosed neurons and pruning overabundant dendritic spines…perhaps leaving patients not quite the same person that they were before they were anesthetized.
对于大多数6个月至60岁的患者而言,麻醉不会产生严重的长期中枢神经系统不良后果这一假设或许是成立的。然而,对于年龄小于6个月或大于60岁的患者,这一现状假设正受到越来越多证据的挑战。胎儿和新生儿似乎面临风险,因为使他们能够从超过两小时的麻醉影响中完全恢复的系统仍在发育中。相比之下,老年人似乎面临风险是因为曾经使他们能够完全恢复的系统功能正日益衰退。即使对于6个月至60岁之间的人来说,完全恢复可能需要替换凋亡的神经元并修剪过多的树突棘……这或许会使患者与麻醉前判若两人。