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        ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
    
    
        World J Anesthesiol. Mar 27, 2014; 3(1): 82-95
Published online Mar 27, 2014. doi: 10.5313/wja.v3.i1.82
Published online Mar 27, 2014. doi: 10.5313/wja.v3.i1.82
| Organ system | Deficits with aging | 
| Liver | Decrease in hepatic blood flow will result in reduction of first pass elimination, phase I metabolism affected earlier than phase II | 
| Kidneys | Reduction in renal blood flow cause decrease in both creatinine clearance, glomerular filtration rate and tubular secretion activities | 
| Plasma drug-binding proteins | Decrease in albumin or other binding proteins will result in higher fraction of plasma free drug | 
| Fluid distribution | Decrease in total body water and muscle, and increase in total body fat may results in smaller effective dose and longer duration of drug effect, especially for lipophilic drugs | 
            Table 2 List of older patient considerations related to regional anesthesia/analgesia
        
    | Indications | Contraindications | 
| Poor cardiac reserve in patients who may not tolerate general anesthesia | Patient refusal | 
| Poor pulmonary reserve: general anesthesia may result in prolonged mechanical ventilation | Sepsis, systemic infection and local infection are relative contraindications, and need to be assessed individually | 
| Known history of adverse cognitive effects due to opioids and/or general anesthesia | Sedation and agitation may place patients at risk during PNB procedures | 
| Severe hepatic insufficiency | Coagulopathy; relative contraindication with superficial PNB where bleeding can be easily controlled by compression | 
| Severe renal insufficiency | Pre-existing neurological disease needs to be documented well and assess risk/benefit ratio | 
| Difficult airway such as in elderly with cervical disk injury/pathology | Hypovolemia and severe aortic stenosis are relative contraindications for neuroaxial blocks, but not for PNBs | 
| Chronic pain patients | Concern that PNB may mask compartment syndrome (controversial), however, collaboration between anesthesiologist and surgeon is necessary | 
| Multiple rib fractures | Allergy to local anesthetics (rare) | 
| Structural changes: gross and molecular level | Neuronal axon loss and pathology (more than seen with glial cells) | 
| Neural cytoskeleton changes resulting in neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques (induces glial cell-mediated inflammation) | |
| Loss of dendrite components and decrease in neural synaptic activity | |
| Amyloidoses due to amyloid protein accumulation | |
| Biochemical changes | Neurotransmitter imbalance: mostly involves changes in serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine, acetylcholine | 
| Circulatory changes: multi-infarct senile dementia; increased BBB permeability | |
| Metabolic disturbances: atherosclerosis and associated blood flow and O2 consumption decreases | |
| Functional sequelae | Gait changes | 
| Sleep and wakefulness alterations and EEG changes | |
| Cognitive impairment | |
| Decreased balance stability/physical equilibrium | 
            Table 4 Types of cognitive dysfunction
        
    | MCI (4 subtypes associated with causes of dementia) | Concept to describe transitional level of neurocognitive impairment | 
| MCI is a predictor of future dementia | |
| Diagnosis by neuropsychological testing and clinical observation | |
| Divided into 4 subtypes (based on presence of: (1) memory impairment plus; (2) number of other cognitive domains affected) | |
| Preoperative MCI may result in postoperative delirium | |
| Delirium | Fluctuating consciousness, develops over hour to days | 
| Altered perception and cognition (not associated with dementia) | |
| In hospital predictors of delirium include: | |
| Bladder catheters | |
| ↓ Functional status | |
| Male gender | |
| Malnutrition | |
| Infection | |
| Depression | |
| 3 or more medications | |
| H2 antagonists | |
| Age | |
| Opioids | |
| Iatrogenic events | |
| Benzodiazepines | |
| Alcohol + drug abuse | |
| POD[74] | Develops on postoperative day 1-3, can be sustained > 1 wk | 
| Age associated central cholinergic deficiency as a positive predictor | |
| Two types of postoperative delirium: | |
| Hypoactive form (more common and more commonly overlooked) | |
| Hyperactive type | |
| Perioperative use of benzodiazepines are associated with POD | |
| Postoperative in-dwelling perineural catheters reduce incidence of POD | |
| Emergence Delirium | Present upon regaining consciousness following general anesthesia | 
| Predicts postoperative delirium | |
| POCD | Condition in which patients have difficulty in performing cognitive tasks following surgery that they could perform prior to surgery | 
| Occurs frequently in and following: carotid endarterectomy, hip fracture repair surgery and cardiac surgery patients (most frequent) | |
| ISPOCD: developed criteria of POCD based on pre- and post-operative neuropsychological testing scores | |
| Predictors of POCD 1 wk postoperatively include: | |
| Duration of anesthesisa | |
| Age (predictor of POCD at 3 mo) | |
| Postoperative infection | |
| Low level of patient education | |
| Pulmonary complications | |
| Need for a second operation | |
| Dementia Alzheimer’s disease (most common form), vascular dementias, frontal lobe, reversible, senile, Lewy body, and Parkinson-associated | Apathy and personality changes occur early | 
| Behavioral changes appear as the condition progresses | |
| Psychotic symptoms are late signs (typically difficult to control) | |
| Multiple cognitive deficits | |
| Clinical findings are associated with: | |
| Problems with social activities | |
| Decline from a previous status | |
| Problems of occupational activities | |
| Gradual and progressive loss of mental abilities | |
| Dementia often results in postoperative delirium | 
            Table 5 Cardiovascular changes associated with the aging process[12]
        
    | Cardiac changes | Coronary artery disease due to atherosclerosis | 
| Changes in CNS innervations of the cardiovascular system: increase in sympathetic and decrease in parasympathetic activity | |
| Diminished response to beta-receptor stimulation | |
| Increase in apoptosis resulting in muscle mass loss, compensatory hyperplagia of remaining cells, abnormal cardiac function that can eventually lead to diastolic and systolic heart failure | |
| Increase in microtubule component of cytoskeleton of cardiocytes results in contraction dysfunction | |
| Vascular system changes | Decreased blood flow due to increased cell adherence, micro-thrombogenic events, atherosclerosis | 
| Increased vasoconstriction and vascular wall stiffening | |
| Impaired endothelium integrity and ability to repair | 
            Table 6 Pulmonary changes and the elderly patient[6]
        
    | Structural aging | Increase of lung parenchymal compliance due to degeneration of elastic fibers | 
| Loss of respiratory muscle mass resulting in less endurance and less respiratory reserve | |
| Increased alveolar permeability, which results in bronchial fluid with increased neurophils and increased ratio of CD4/CD8 cells | |
| Decreased surface area for oxygen exchange | |
| Functional aging | Chest wall rigidity | 
| Reduced maximum breathing capacity | |
| A greater in difference between alvelolar and arterial oxygen concentration | |
| Increase in closing capacity | |
| Less effective coughing | |
| Impaired swallowing with high risk of aspiration pneumonia | 
- Citation: Li J, Halaszynski TM. Regional anesthesia for acute pain management in elderly patients. World J Anesthesiol 2014; 3(1): 82-95
 - URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2218-6182/full/v3/i1/82.htm
 - DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5313/wja.v3.i1.82
 
