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Anaesth Intensive Care · May 2022
Age-related differences in cognition and postoperative quality of recovery after beach chair position shoulder surgery.
- Alwin Chuan, Minh T Tran, Alice X Sun, Tajrian Amin, Yan X Chan, Benjamin S Hanley, Shubash A Quazi, Benjamin S Xie, and John N Trantalis.
- Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
- Anaesth Intensive Care. 2022 May 1; 50 (3): 169-177.
AbstractWe examined the influence of age in beach chair position shoulder surgery and postoperative quality of recovery by conducting a single-site, observational, cohort study comparing younger aged (18-40 years) versus older aged (at least 60 years) patients admitted for elective shoulder surgery in the beach chair position. Endpoints were dichotomous return of function to each patient's individual preoperative baseline as assessed using the postoperative quality of recovery scale; measuring cognition, nociception, physiological, emotional, functional activities and overall perspective. We recruited 112 (41 younger and 71 older aged) patients. There was no statistical difference in cognitive recovery at day three postoperatively (primary outcome): 26/32 younger patients (81%) versus 43/60 (72%) older patients, P=0.45. Rates of recovery were age-dependent on domain and time frame (secondary outcomes), with older patients recovering faster in the nociceptive domain (P=0.02), slower in the emotional domain (P=0.02) and not different in the physiological, functional activities and overall perspective domains (all P >0.35). In conclusion, we did not show any statistically significant difference in cognitive outcomes between younger and older patients using our perioperative anaesthesia and analgesia management protocol. Irrespective of age, 70% of patients recovered by three months in all domains.
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