INFLUENCE OF THE TYPE OF ANESTHESIA ON POSTOPERATIVE SUBJECTIVE PHYSICAL WELL-BEING AND MENTAL FUNCTION IN ELDERLY PATIENTS

被引:24
作者
CRUL, BJP
HULSTIJN, W
BURGER, IC
机构
[1] CATHOLIC UNIV NIJMEGEN,DEPT GERONTOL,NIJMEGEN,NETHERLANDS
[2] CATHOLIC UNIV NIJMEGEN,NIJMEGEN INST COGNIT RES & INFORMAT TECHNOL,NIJMEGEN,NETHERLANDS
关键词
ANESTHESIA; GENERAL; SPINAL; BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS; POSTOPERATIVE MENTAL FUNCTIONING; PREOPERATIVE PHYSICAL CONDITION; SUBJECTIVE PHYSICAL WELL-BEING;
D O I
10.1111/j.1399-6576.1992.tb03531.x
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
Standardized behavioural observations were used to establish the influence of the type of anaesthesia on the mental function and the subjective physical well-being in 60 patients, all men, following urological surgery. The patients were randomized to two groups, receiving spinal or general anaesthesia. For evaluation of the influence of pre-operative physical condition on post-operative mental function, a supplementary group of 34 patients with pre-existing cardiovascular and/or pulmonary disorders was included in the study. These patients all received spinal anaesthesia. The patients were observed from the day before surgery until 4 weeks after. In all patients a short-lasting temporary decline in mental function was observed. The outcome was not influenced by the type of anaesthesia. In the two groups receiving spinal anaesthesia the decline in post-operative mental function and subjective sense of well-being was most pronounced in patients with a compromised physical condition pre-operatively. Four weeks after surgery, no signs of mental deterioration were present; however, the subjective sense of physical well-being had not fully returned.
引用
收藏
页码:615 / 620
页数:6
相关论文
共 15 条
[1]  
BEDFORD PD, 1955, LANCET, V2, P259
[2]  
BLUNDELL E, 1967, BRIT J SOC CLIN PSYC, V6, P297
[3]  
BRANDER P, 1970, Annales Chirurgiae et Gynaecologiae Fenniae, V59, P138
[4]   GENERAL OR SPINAL-ANESTHESIA - WHICH IS BETTER IN THE ELDERLY [J].
CHUNG, F ;
MEIER, R ;
LAUTENSCHLAGER, E ;
CARMICHAEL, FJ ;
CHUNG, A .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1987, 67 (03) :422-427
[5]  
EDWARDS H, 1981, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V245, P1342, DOI 10.1001/jama.245.13.1342
[6]   COMPARISON OF PSYCHOLOGIC AND COGNITIVE FUNCTIONS AFTER GENERAL OR REGIONAL ANESTHESIA [J].
GHONEIM, MM ;
HINRICHS, JV ;
OHARA, MW ;
MEHTA, MP ;
PATHAK, D ;
KUMAR, V ;
CLARK, CR .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1988, 69 (04) :507-515
[7]   POSTOPERATIVE ANTEROGRADE AMNESIA [J].
GRUBER, RP ;
REED, DR .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 1968, 40 (11) :845-&
[8]   EPIDURAL VERSUS GENERAL-ANESTHESIA FOR TOTAL HIP-ARTHROPLASTY IN ELDERLY PATIENTS [J].
HOLE, A ;
TERJESEN, T ;
BREIVIK, H .
ACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 1980, 24 (04) :279-287
[9]   A COMPARISON OF MEMORY FUNCTION FOLLOWING LOCAL AND GENERAL-ANESTHESIA FOR EXTRACTION OF SENILE CATARACT [J].
KARHUNEN, U ;
JONN, G .
ACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 1982, 26 (04) :291-296
[10]   LONG-TERM COGNITIVE AND SOCIAL SEQUELAE OF GENERAL VERSUS REGIONAL ANESTHESIA DURING ARTHROPLASTY IN THE ELDERLY [J].
NIELSON, WR ;
GELB, AW ;
CASEY, JE ;
PENNY, FJ ;
MERCHANT, RN ;
MANNINEN, PH .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1990, 73 (06) :1103-1109