From the Anesthesiology Department, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Anesth Analg. 2018 Dec;127(6):1406-1413. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000003841.
As part of the American Society of Anesthesiology Brain Health Initiative goal of improving perioperative brain health for older patients, over 30 experts met at the fifth International Perioperative Neurotoxicity Workshop in San Francisco, CA, in May 2016, to discuss best practices for optimizing perioperative brain health in older adults (ie, >65 years of age). The objective of this workshop was to discuss and develop consensus solutions to improve patient management and outcomes and to discuss what older adults should be told (and by whom) about postoperative brain health risks. Thus, the workshop was provider and patient oriented as well as solution focused rather than etiology focused. For those areas in which we determined that there were limited evidence-based recommendations, we identified knowledge gaps and the types of scientific knowledge and investigations needed to direct future best practice. Because concerns about perioperative neurocognitive injury in pediatric patients are already being addressed by the SmartTots initiative, our workshop discussion (and thus this article) focuses specifically on perioperative cognition in older adults. The 2 main perioperative cognitive disorders that have been studied to date are postoperative delirium and cognitive dysfunction. Postoperative delirium is a syndrome of fluctuating changes in attention and level of consciousness that occurs in 20%-40% of patients >60 years of age after major surgery and inpatient hospitalization. Many older surgical patients also develop postoperative cognitive deficits that typically last for weeks to months, thus referred to as postoperative cognitive dysfunction. Because of the heterogeneity of different tools and thresholds used to assess and define these disorders at varying points in time after anesthesia and surgery, a recent article has proposed a new recommended nomenclature for these perioperative neurocognitive disorders. Our discussion about this topic was organized around 4 key issues: preprocedure consent, preoperative cognitive assessment, intraoperative management, and postoperative follow-up. These 4 issues also form the structure of this document. Multiple viewpoints were presented by participants and discussed at this in-person meeting, and the overall group consensus from these discussions was then drafted by a smaller writing group (the 6 primary authors of this article) into this manuscript. Of course, further studies have appeared since the workshop, which the writing group has incorporated where appropriate. All participants from this in-person meeting then had the opportunity to review, edit, and approve this final manuscript; 1 participant did not approve the final manuscript and asked for his/her name to be removed.
作为美国麻醉学会脑健康倡议的目标的一部分,该倡议旨在改善老年患者围手术期的大脑健康,超过 30 名专家于 2016 年 5 月在加利福尼亚州旧金山举行的第五届国际围手术期神经毒性研讨会,讨论优化老年人(即年龄> 65 岁)围手术期大脑健康的最佳实践。本次研讨会的目的是讨论并制定共识解决方案,以改善患者管理和结果,并讨论应向老年人(以及由谁)告知有关术后大脑健康风险的信息。因此,该研讨会面向提供者和患者,重点是解决方案,而不是病因。对于我们确定证据有限的建议的那些领域,我们确定了知识空白以及需要哪种科学知识和调查来指导未来的最佳实践。由于有关儿科患者围手术期神经认知损伤的问题已经由 SmartTots 倡议来解决,因此我们的研讨会讨论(因此本文)专门针对老年人围手术期认知。迄今为止,已经研究了 2 种主要的围手术期认知障碍,即术后谵妄和认知功能障碍。术后谵妄是一种注意力和意识水平波动变化的综合征,发生在 60 岁以上的患者中,发生率为 20%-40%,并且在大型手术后和住院期间会发生。许多老年手术患者还会出现术后认知缺陷,通常持续数周至数月,因此被称为术后认知功能障碍。由于在麻醉和手术后的不同时间点使用不同的工具和阈值来评估和定义这些疾病,因此最近的一篇文章提出了用于这些围手术期神经认知障碍的新推荐命名法。我们围绕以下 4 个关键问题进行了讨论:术前同意,术前认知评估,术中管理和术后随访。这 4 个问题也是本文的结构。在这次面对面会议上,参与者提出了多种观点并进行了讨论,然后由一个较小的写作小组(本文的 6 位主要作者)将这些讨论的总体小组共识起草为这份手稿。当然,自研讨会以来,又出现了进一步的研究,写作小组在适当的地方将其纳入。所有参加这次面对面会议的参与者都有机会审阅,编辑和批准这份最终手稿;有 1 位参与者未批准最终手稿,并要求删除他/她的名字。