AI Article Synopsis

  • Preoperative neurocognitive disorder (preO-NCD) affects a significant portion of the elderly, and this study aimed to assess its prevalence in cardiac surgery patients and the potential impact of previous general anesthesia on cognitive abilities.
  • Among the 151 patients studied, a high general cognitive impairment rate (79.5%) was found, with 22% having executive function impairment; age was linked to increased cognitive issues while education seemed to protect against them.
  • While prior general anesthesia didn't significantly influence preO-NCD, older patients who had experienced it showed a heightened risk for executive function impairment, suggesting a relationship worth further investigation.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Preoperative neurocognitive disorder (preO-NCD) is a common condition affecting 14-51. 7% of the elderly population. General anesthesia has already been associated with the one-year post-operative neurocognitive disorder (PostO-NCD), specifically, a deficit in executive function, measured by the Trail Making Test B (TMT-B), but its long-term effects on cognitive function have not been investigated. We aimed to detect preO-NCD prevalence in patients scheduled for cardiac surgery and further investigate the possible role of previous general anesthesia (pGA) in general preoperative cognitive status [measured the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)] and/or in executive functioning (measured TMT-B).

Methods: In this observational, prospective study, 151 adult patients scheduled for elective cardiac surgery underwent MoCA and TMT-B. Data on age, education, pGA, comorbidities, and laboratory results were collected.

Results: We discovered a general cognitive function impairment of 79.5% and an executive function impairment of 22%. Aging is associated with an increased likelihood (OR 2.99, = 0.047) and education with a decreased likelihood (OR 0.35, = 0.0045) of general cognitive impairment, but only education was significantly associated with a decreased likelihood (OR 0.22, = 0.021) of executive function impairment. While pGA did not significantly affect preO-NCD, a noteworthy interaction between aging and pGA was found, resulting in a synergistic effect, increasing the likelihood of executive function impairment (OR 9.740, = 0.0174).

Conclusion: We found a high prevalence of preO-NCD in patients scheduled for cardiac surgery. General cognitive function impairment is highly associated with advancing age (not pGA). However, older patients with at least one pGA appeared to be at an increased risk of preO-NCD, especially executive function impairment, suggesting that TMT-B should be associated with MoCA in the preoperative cognitive evaluation in this population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9148968PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2022.810046DOI Listing

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