Noncardiac surgery in middle-aged patients resulted in a 19.2% incidence of cognitive dysfunction at 7 days compared to 4.0% in controls (P<0.001), which largely resolved by 3 months.
Cohort
Does noncardiac surgery increase the incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in middle-aged patients (40-60 years) compared to age-matched controls?
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction is common at 1 week after noncardiac surgery in middle-aged patients but typically resolves by 3 months, though subjective symptoms may persist.
Absolute Event Rate: 19.2% vs 4%
p-value: p=<0.001
BACKGROUND: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) after noncardiac surgery is strongly associated with increasing age in elderly patients; middle-aged patients (aged 40-60 yr) may be expected to have a lower incidence, although subjective complaints are frequent. METHODS: The authors compared the changes in neuropsychological test results at 1 week and 3 months in patients aged 40-60 yr, using a battery of neuropsychological tests, with those of age-matched control subjects using Z-score analysis. They assessed risk factors and associations of POCD with measures of subjective cognitive function, depression, and activities of daily living. RESULTS: At 7 days, cognitive dysfunction as defined was present in 19.2% (confidence interval CI, 15.7-23.1) of the patients and in 4.0% (CI, 1.6-8.0) of control subjects (P < 0.001). After 3 months, the incidence was 6.2% (CI, 4.1-8.9) in patients and 4.1% (CI, 1.7-8.4) in control subjects (not significant). POCD at 7 days was associated with supplementary epidural analgesia and reported avoidance of alcohol consumption. At 3 months, 29% of patients had subjective symptoms of POCD, and this finding was associated with depression. Early POCD was associated with reports of lower activity scores at 3 months. CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction occurs frequently but resolves by 3 months after surgery. It may be associated with decreased activity during this period. Subjective report overestimates the incidence of POCD. Patients may be helped by recognition that the problem is genuine and reassured that it is likely to be transient.
Johnson et al. (Sat,) conducted a cohort in Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) after noncardiac surgery. Noncardiac surgery vs. Age-matched control subjects was evaluated on Cognitive dysfunction at 7 days (p=<0.001). Noncardiac surgery in middle-aged patients resulted in a 19.2% incidence of cognitive dysfunction at 7 days compared to 4.0% in controls (P<0.001), which largely resolved by 3 months.