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Anaesthesia in the elderly Dr. D. de Wet Introduction • With advances in medicine and technology the population is changing and life expectancy increasing • In South Africa the percentage of people over 65 years increased from 9.6% in 1996 to 10.6% in 2011 • It is predicted that in Europe people over 65 years will increase to 30% in the next 40 years • This indicates that our patient population will also consist of older individuals of which many will require surgery Introduction • Age itself is not a disease process • Serves as a chance for age related diseases to develop eg. HPT,COPD, Heart failure etc. • In giving anaesthesia to the elderly we need to keep in mind normal changes of physiology and accompanying co-morbidities Topics covered • Age related anatomical and physiological changes o Diastolic dysfunction • Age related pharmacological changes • Pre-operative assessment • Intra-operative considerations • Post-operative considerations • Frailty Age-related anatomical and physiological changes Cardiovascular System • It is important to distinguish between normal changes in physiology with increased age and pathology • Cardiovascular disease is more prevalent in the elderly including atherosclerosis, hypertension, cardiac failure, valve lesions Cardiovascular System • Myocardial hypertrophy • Myocardial stiffening • Reduced LV relaxation • Reduced B-receptor responsiveness • Conduction system abnormalities • Stiff arteries Diastolic dysfunction • Several changes in cardiac structure and function occur with normal aging that contribute to DD • Stiffer and less compliant ventricle affects diastolic relaxation • Pulse wave velocity is the speed at which the pressure wave generated by the contracting heart travels to the periphery and is responsible for a palpable pulse • Stiffer vessels – faster pulse wave Diastolic dysfunction • Young people - Reflected wave returns to the heart during diastole • Elderly - Reflected wave returns to the heart in late systole, increasing the SBP and PP • Most elderly patients have a normal EF, but a third will have DD Diastolic dysfunction • LV filling in - young patients - Early diastole - the elderly - LA contraction more important • Difference between DD and diastolic HF - DD is a physiological state where abnormal relaxation is compensated for by LA contraction so that preload remains adequate Diastolic dysfunction • Patients with DD may be asymptomatic at rest - periods of activity will show SOB, fatigue and exertional dyspnoea • Important to do thorough pre-op assessment • During anaesthesia these CV changes predispose the elderly to greater hemodynamic instability • Monitoring volume status is critical - A-line to monitor BP is a good idea Diastolic dysfunction • Induction may be prolonged due to slow circulation time - titrate - enough time • Maintain SBP within 10% of baseline • DBP must be maintained, as low DBP lead to myocardial ischaemia • Simultaneous infusions of low dose nitroglycerin and PEP can help • Administered alone however, these agents may worsen cardiac function • HR should be maintained at low normal range (60-70) Diastolic dysfunction • Rule of 70 • • Patients with DD can acutely deteriorate after initially appearing stable Common post-op complications o Patients > 70 o DBP > 70 o PP < 70 o HR = 70 o Hypoxia o Pulmonary oedema o AF Respiratory system • Aging decreases the elasticity in lung tissue, allowing overdistention of alveoli and collapse of small airways • Residual volume and FRC increase – Both physiological and anatomical dead space increase • Some airways close during normal tidal breathing resulting in ventilationperfusion mismatch • Increased chest wall rigidity and decreased muscle strength leads to: o Decreased cough o Decreased maximal breathing capacity Respiratory system • Blunted response to hypoxia • Aspiration pneumonia – decrease in protective laryngeal reflexes Metabolic and endocrine function • Peak weight at age 60 – most people then begin to lose weight as a consequence of decreased muscle mass • Heat production decrease and heat loss increase – more prone to perioperative hypothermia • DM affects +/- 15% of patients >70 y/o • Decreased response to ß-adrenergic agents Renal function • Renal blood flow and kidney mass decrease – increases the risk of perioperative ARF • Renal function is reduced in even healthy older patients • Creatinine level is unchanged (decreased muscle mass) , Urea increases • Predisposed to both dehydration and fluid overload • As renal function decreases so does the ability to excrete drugs Gastro-intestinal function • Liver mass and hepatic blood flow decline with aging – hepatic function declines in proportion to the decrease in liver mass • Thus, the rate of biotransformation and albumin production decrease • The elderly also have slower gastric emptying and a deterioration in parietal cell function Nervous system • Brain mass decreases with age • Neuronal loss most prominent in the cortex of the frontal lobes • Cerebral blood flow decreases in proportion to neuronal losses • Decrease in sensory modalities such as touch, temperature sensation, proprioception, hearing and vision Nervous system • High incidence of POCD and delirium in elderly patients • Some studies suggest that POCD can be detected in +/- 15% of patients over 60 y/o up to 3 months after major surgery • Etiology of POCD : drug effects, pain, hypothermia, metabolic disturbances • Question still remains if GA agents can cause neurotoxicity of the aged brain Musculoskeletal function • Muscle mass is reduced • Skin atrophies with age – susceptible to trauma from removal of tape, ECG stickers, pressure sores • Arthritic joints may interfere with positioning or regional anaesthesia • Degenerative cervical spine disease can limit neck extension – difficult intubation • Especially if the patient has no teeth Age-related Pharmacological changes Age-related pharmacological changes • Age produces both pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics changes • Decrease in muscle mass and increase in body fat results in decreased total body water • Increased volume of distribution for lipid-soluble drugs reduce their plasma concentration • Reduced volume of distribution for water-soluble drugs lead to greater plasma concentrations • Prolonged duration of action of many drugs, because of previously mentioned decline in hepatic and renal function Age-related pharmacological changes • Elimination of drugs also affected by altered plasma protein binding: -Albumin (binds acidic drugs) Decrease -α1-acidic glycoprotein (binds basic drugs) Increase • Reduced anaesthetic requirements Inhalational Agents • MAC is reduced by 4% per decade after 40 y/o • Onset of action:- faster if CO depressed - delayed if there is V/P abnormalities • Recovery may be prolonged because of – increased volume of distribution and decreased pulmonary gas exchange IV Agents • In general – lower dose requirements for propofol, opiods and benzo’s • Propofol is a useful agent in the elderly because of rapid elimination, but is more likely to cause apnoea and hypotension. Elderly patients require nearly 50% lower blood levels of Propofol than younger patients • Geriatric patients have an enhanced sensitivity to fentanyl and alfentanyl than younger patients (Also require half the dose) Muscle Relaxants • Response to sux and other neuro-muscular blockers is unaltered by aging • A prolongation in the onset of NM blockade in elderly patients is seen due to a decreased CO and slow muscle blood flow • Recovery from non-depolarising MR that depend on renal/hepatic excretion is prolonged • Hoffman-elimination is not significantly effected by age Pre-operative assessment Pre-operative assessment • Studies show mortality/morbidity rates for fit, healthy geriatric patients are not significantly higher than younger patients • 65% Incidence of correctable deficiencies in blood volume, electrolyte imbalance or oxygen delivery in emergency setting • Therefor a detailed pre-op evaluation and correction of those deficiencies is needed in all patients presenting for surgery The decision to operate • This decision should be made at consultant level of surgical and anaesthetic disciplines • Ideally in conjuction with MDT, family and MOST importantly the patient • Procedure should improve quality and quantity of life • No place for heroic, but futile surgery History • Prior to taking history – Mini Mental • Collateral history very important, including old notes • In addition to standard PMHx and systemic enquiry, also ask: o Background to admission o Co-morbids o Medications o Level of social support, AODL, exercise tolerance Examination • Vitals • Fluid status • Full systemic exam • Walk the stairs with the pt to evaluate exercise tolerance Investigations • FBC, U&E, Vx • ECG • Otherwise investigate as clinically indicated Intra-operative considerations Intra-operative considerations • Multiple studies have come to the same conclusion: No difference in outcome can be attributed to the use of any specific agent • More important to individualise what is compatible with each patient • Attention to detail Intra-operative considerations Some specific issues: • Pre-warm patients • Adequate IV access • Measures to prevent hypoxia: - Longer pre-oxygenation - Higher FiO2 - PEEP • With IV induction – doses can be reduced if given slowly • Use of short acting agents • Keep vasopressors at hand Intra-operative considerations • Airway maintenance more difficult because of: Osteoporotic mandibles, loose teeth, tempero-mandibular joint stiffness, cervical spondylosis, arthritis of atlanto-occipital joint • Regional vs General - 17 trials • Advantages of RA: o Reduces Thrombo-embolic events o Reduces confusion o Reduces post-op respiratory problems o Reduces endocrine stress response Intra-operative considerations • Maintenance of normothermia needs careful attention Hypothermia impairs coagulation, immune function and wound healing Shivering in recovery increases O2 demand and can lead to myocardial ischaemia • Fluid management Based on pre-op hydration, losses, urine output, P , BP • Positioning Increased frequency of neuropraxia Pressure sores Post-operative considerations Post-operative considerations • DVT prophylaxis - Not only Clexane - Good hydration, early mobilisation, thrombo-embolic stockings • Nutrition - Aids healing and recovery • Glucose monitoring • Fluid management - prescribe • Oxygen therapy – prescribe o Ventilatory muscles fatigue o Reduced CNS response to hypoxia o Protective cough reflex reduce with age Post-operative considerations • Pain - Myth that pain perception reduses with age and that they cannot tolerate opiods - Regional blocks • Cognition Frailty Definition • Phenotype that identifies people with reduced physiological reserve in multiple organ systems, who, as a result have increased vulnerability to physiological stressors • Not all elderly are frail, Not all frail are elderly Why is frailty important? • Identify patients with a limited ability to cope with physiological stressors associated with the peri-operative period • Allows treatment decisions to be altered to benefit the patient • Stronger predictor of mortality than chronological age Risk factors • Physiological o Age o Reduced body mass • Co-morbidities o CV disease o Stroke, DM, Cancer, COPD • Psychological factors o Females o Lower socio-economic background o Depression • Disability Assessment of frailty • 3 or more of 5 criteria (Fried et al.) : 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Unintentional weight loss - 4,5kg or more in 12 months Exhaustion - objectively Weak hand grip strength Slow walking speed - “get up and go” test Low physical activity Take home messages • Age itself is not a disease • Many normal physiological changes that influence our anaesthetic • Co-morbidities more likely in older patients – thorough pre-op exam to determine any underlying undiagnosed disease • No ideal agent for the elderly – titrate and go slow • Frailty - important concept - strong predictor of morbidity • Treat the elderly with care, dignity and respect Thank you Referances 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Hollister N. Anaesthesia in the Elderly. World Anaesthesia Tutorial of the Week. www.AnaesthesiaUK.com/WorldAnaesthesia Hubbard RE, Story DA. Patient frailty: the elephant in the operating room. Anaesthesia 2014, 69 (26-34) Dodds C, Foo I. Peri-operative care of elderly patients – an urgent need for change. Age Anaesthesia Assosiation. (1-9) Alcock M. Frailty and the perioperative period. Anaesthesia Tutorial of the Week 236. www.totw.anaesthesiologists.org Partridge JSL, Harari D, Dhesi JK. Frailty in the older surgical patient: a review. Age and Ageing 2012, 41 (142-147) Sanders D, Dudley M, Groban L. Diastolic Dysfunction, Cardiovascular aging, and the Anaesthesiologist. Anesthesiology Clin 27, 2009 (497-517) Butterworth JF, Mackey DC, Wasnick JD. Morgan & Mikhail’s Clinical Anesthesiology. 5th ed. Lange. 2013