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Surgery not linked to memory problems in
older patients
Newswise — For years, it has been widely
assumed that older adults may experience
memory loss and other cognitive problems
following surgery. But a new study from
researchers at Washington University School
of Medicine in St. Louis questions those
assumptions.
In
fact, the researchers were not able to
detect any long-term cognitive declines
attributable to surgery in a group of 575
patients they studied.
"There's a perception that people go in for
surgery, and they aren't quite the same
afterward," says first author Michael S.
Avidan, M.D.
"The reports of cognitive deterioration have
varied, but several studies have suggested
it affects many elderly people. In my
experience as an anesthesiologist, I've
found this is a very common concern."
But Avidan, associate professor of
anesthesiology and surgery, and fellow
investigator Alex S. Evers, M.D., the Henry
E. Mallinckrodt Professor and head of the
Department of Anesthesiology, questioned
those conclusions.
"We wondered how reasonable it was to
compare people having surgery to people who
were perfectly healthy," Evers explains.
"We thought a better comparison group might
be people who were equally ill."
Past cognitive studies tested surgery
patients just before an operation and then
retested them several months later.
So
if a patient was just beginning to suffer
declines at the time of the first test, it
might be assumed that further declines at
follow-up were caused by their operation
when, in fact, they already were underway.
To get better initial screenings, Avidan and
Evers examined data from Washington
University's Alzheimer's Disease Research
Center (ADRC).
The ADRC tests cognitive function in
volunteers annually, beginning at the age of
50. Having years of cognitive data on hand
made it easier to map a person's cognitive
trajectory before and after surgery or
illness and see whether either had any
long-term impact on cognitive performance.
The 575 patients they studied had been
tested annually at the ADRC and include
those with Alzheimer's-type dementia.
At the start of the study, 361 people had
mild to moderate dementia, and 214 were
dementia-free. Those patients were divided
into three groups: those who had surgery,
those with illness, and a third group with
neither.
"We were able to use patients as their own
controls before and after surgery and to
compare groups of patients over time, and we
did not detect any evidence of a long-term
cognitive decline," Evers says.
"Our findings suggest that if older people
physically recover from surgery, they should
expect that within six months or a year,
they will return to their previous level of
cognitive ability, too."
Evers and Avidan say this study would have
been impossible without a database of
patients like those at the ADRC.
Knowing how people functioned for years
before and after surgery or illness allowed
them to learn whether a major event somehow
changed their cognitive trajectories. It did
not, even in patients with dementia at the
time of surgery.
"This is an important finding for persons
with Alzheimer's and their families who may
worry that a pending operation could
adversely affect the patient's cognitive
status" says John C. Morris M.D., the Harvey
A. and Dorismae Hacker Friedman
Distinguished Professor of Neurology and
director of the ADRC.
"There has been a widespread belief that the
memory and thinking abilities of patients
with early Alzheimer's disease may worsen as
a consequence of surgery, but the evidence
from this study does not support that
belief."
The investigators say their study, published
in the November issue of the journal
Anesthesiology, is not the final word on
the relationship between surgery and
cognitive declines.
They believe that some patients may be more
vulnerable for genetic reasons or because of
how their brains react to surgery or
anesthesia. They also excluded cardiac
surgery patients from this study because of
elevated stroke risk and other risks posed
by cardiac surgery that aren't as common in
other types of operations.
But they say, in general, the findings
should be a relief for older people facing
surgery.
"An older person should not anticipate
cognitive deterioration following surgery,"
says Avidan. "If you need surgery, and
you're elderly, even if you already have
some cognitive impairment, whether you
decide to have surgery or not should depend
on surgical risks and benefits, and not the
possibility of cognitive problems."
This study was supported by grants from the
University of Missouri Alzheimer's Disease
and Related Disorders Program and from the
National Institute on Aging of the National
Institutes of Health.
Washington University School of Medicine's
2,100 employed and volunteer faculty
physicians also are the medical staff of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one of the leading
medical research, teaching and patient care
institutions in the nation, currently ranked
third in the nation by U.S. News & World
Report. Through its affiliations with
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked
to BJC HealthCare.
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