• Sao Paulo Med J · Mar 2005

    Preoperative laboratory evaluation of patients aged over 40 years undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery.

    • Fábio Yoshito Ajimura, Alex Silva Santos Freire Maia, Adriana Hachiya, Alexandra Sayuri Watanabe, Maria do Patrocínio Tenório Nunes, Mílton de Arruda Martins, and Fábio Santana Machado.
    • Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Universidade de São Paulo, Av. Dr. Arnaldo 455, São Paulo, Brazil CEP 01246-903.
    • Sao Paulo Med J. 2005 Mar 2;123(2):50-3.

    Context And ObjectiveAlthough it is generally agreed that a medical history and physical examination should be obtained as part of preoperative evaluation, there is still substantial controversy about the additional benefits of preoperative screening tests. The objective of the present study was to determine the percentage of abnormalities on laboratory tests among a population that underwent non-cardiac surgery and to correlate these tests with changes in preoperative evaluation management.Design And SettingCross-sectional study, carried out in a University Hospital.Methods991 patients aged over 40 years undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery from July 1997 to January 2000 were studied. Blood cell count, serum sodium, potassium, urea and creatinine, prothrombin, thrombin and partial thromboplastin time, electrocardiogram and chest X-ray were evaluated.ResultsOut of the 957 electrocardiograms performed, some type of abnormality was found in 504 cases (50.9%) and, among the 646 chest X-rays requested, 271 (42.0%) displayed alterations. Laboratory tests showed abnormal values ranging from 5.1% (prothrombin time) to 41.0% (hematocrit). Increased percentages of abnormal tests with increasing patient age were also observed.ConclusionsAlthough there were substantial numbers of screening test abnormalities in preoperative evaluations, these results seldom interfered in patient management.

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