Pharmacology & therapeutics
-
The outcome of surgery in the elderly depends on the skill of the surgeon and the expertise of the anaesthetist caring for the patient. This anaesthetic proficiency depends initially on the application of the detailed knowledge of the drugs used during anaesthesia, and on the understanding of the way changes in the elderly patients' physiology with ageing affects both kinetic and dynamic facets of pharmacology. However, the very diversity of the elderly population makes their precise response to drugs unpredictable, and, therefore, clear, unequivocal guidance on practice is limited. ⋯ This review, therefore, deals mainly with the anaesthetic vapours and intravenous drugs, and with neuromuscular blocking agents. The restriction of space and the enormity of the subject demand that the areas covered in this review are solely limited to the major classes of drugs used routinely in general anaesthetic practice in the United Kingdom. The detailed pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of drugs also used in the post-operative period, such as the wide variety of opiates, and of drugs mainly used in general medical practice, but occasionally used as premedicants or supplements during anaesthesia, have been monitored only in passing.