© Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2017
Salomone Di Saverio, Fausto Catena, Luca Ansaloni, Federico Coccolini and George Velmahos (eds.)Acute Care Surgery Handbook10.1007/978-3-319-15341-4_2828. Geriatric Emergency Surgery
(1)
Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Stavanger University Hospital, 8100, Stavanger, Norway
Keywords
Geriatric surgeryTraumaEmergency surgeryEmergency abdominal surgeryOrgan failureFrailtyEthicsMorbidityComorbidityMortality28.1 Introduction
Due to the progress in health and safety of living, elderly population is increasing worldwide. The rate of aged persons will accumulate in both developing and developed countries over the next decades. Currently, there are an estimated one billion people aged >60 years worldwide, and this is projected to increase to over two billion by year 2050, with a more than two- to threefold increase in developing countries [1]. Associated with this change in demography comes also increased health care costs, added complexity in care and higher morbidity and mortality, in particular for patients presenting with emergency surgery conditions [2–4]. Thus, this chapter will give a brief overview of issues in geriatric emergency surgery care that need to be taken into account by the surgeon.
28.2 Aging and Medical Conditions
With increasing age comes also an increased risk or susceptibility for certain diseases, including those that follow with added comorbidity, use of drugs and lifestyle risk factors. In most of the emergency general surgery conditions, the mortality also increases severalfold with each decade of age [5]. The biology of aging and its molecular hallmarks have been reviewed previously [6]. For surgeons it is of paramount importance to acknowledge that aging comes with specific concerns and added physiological challenges to specific organ systems and for the capacity to recover after an insult [7].
28.2.1 Role of Comorbidity
A number of preexisting comorbidities in the elderly presenting with an acute condition leads to increased postoperative complications and death [8]. A decreased cardiovascular and pulmonary reserve capacity results in tissue hypoxia that can be hard to detect. In the elderly, cardiogenic shock is often occult with a normal measured blood pressure due to stiff vessels and high vascular resistance [8] and shock (or hypoperfusion) starts at a higher blood pressure levels than in the young patient [9].
28.2.2 Renal Function and Reserve
Renal failure is also common and can be hard to detect due to the decreased muscle mass and creatinine levels in the elderly, making creatinine an unreliable predictor of renal function. Renal failure complicates hydration, medication dosage, and precludes the use of many commonly used drugs. Indeed, as such renal failure is associated with mortality [10].
28.2.3 Nutritional Status
Protein and caloric undernutrition is also prevalent, and the catabolic state associated with critical illness predisposes to rapid wasting, infections, and increased morbidity and mortality. This warrants early focus on nutritional support [8].
28.2.4 Cardiovascular Events and Drugs
Also surgery in the elderly is associated with postoperative complications like atrial fibrillation, myocardial ischemia, and respiratory failure. Coagulopathy is also common due to frequent use of warfarin and antiplatelet drugs in these patients [8].
28.2.5 Risk of Delirium
Postoperative delirium presents in about 10 % of patients after elective surgery and doubles to about 20 % after emergency surgery. Delirium is often underdiagnosed and it may delay rehabilitation.
Guidelines for prevention and improved treatment of delirium [11] advocate use of interdisciplinary teams, mobility and walking, avoiding restraints, sleep hygiene, and adequate nutrition, fluid, and oxygen. Postoperative pain control (preferably without opioids) is important for prevention.
28.3 Emergency Conditions for an Aging Population
Specific disease patterns emerge with increasing age. For example, the risk of fractures increases with age, and age- and gender-specific patterns demonstrate types, complexity, and need for operative treatment for long-bone fractures [12]. Further, risk of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms (rAAA) also demonstrates an age-specific increase [13], as does the risk of perforated peptic ulcer [14].
28.4 Assessment of Frailty in the Elderly and Risk Scores
With an aging population, it is necessary to find tools to evaluate risks for morbidity and mortality related to emergency surgery. The concept of frailty is described as “a state of reduced physiological reserve associated with increased susceptibility to disability” [15]. Frailty has been associated with worse outcome after surgery [16]. Frailty can be seen as a biological syndrome of decreased reserve or, as an accumulation of deficits in terms of medical, social, and functional deficits [16]. No available scores exist for the emergency setting. Existing scores have been investigated, but these either fail to predict accurately the outcome or they are cumbersome to use in a clinical setting. Scores developed for elective evaluation have been investigated for emergency abdominal surgery [17]. Among the six instruments, the Vulnerable Elders Survey (VES-13) predicted the 30-day mortality and morbidity best. In general, mortality increase with increasing age, higher ASA score, need for emergency procedures, and for palliative surgery associated with a malignancy [18]. Thus, the use of documented variables together with a clinical acumen are the best predictors at present.
28.5 Organization of Geriatric Emergency Services
Indeed, treatment elderly, frail patients is complicated, and organizing the treatment of geriatric patients has been a topic of debate. Specialized geriatric surgical units have been proposed as a solution [19]. Further, elderly surgical patients experience failure-to-rescue events at much higher rates than their younger counterparts, particularly for infectious and pulmonary complications [20]. Increased attention to the role of organizational dynamics in hospitals’ ability to rescue these high-risk patients will establish high-yield interventions aimed at improving patient safety [21].
28.5.1 Geriatric Units and Multidisciplinary Care
The core of geriatric units should be a multidisciplinary approach including all subspecialties of surgery, and nonsurgical specialist such as anaesthesiologists, geriatricians, pharmacist, nutritionist, and physiotherapists [19]. Together they should conduct preoperative assessment for frailty, comorbidity, and polypharmacy, allowing for optimal presurgery fitness, and postoperative rehabilitation.
Trauma units designed to expedite the care of geriatric patients through a multidisciplinary approach have been successful [22]. Criteria for triaging, disposition, and admission were established between emergency department and surgeons. Orthopedic surgeons implemented strategies of operative management in 48 h. Internal medicine assisted in optimizing chronic disease and providing preoperative clearance with involvement of cardiology and anesthesiology [22]. Multidisciplinary teams included surgeons, physical therapists, occupational therapists, respiratory therapists, nutritionists, pharmacists, social workers, case managers, internists, a geriatrician, and physical medicine and rehabilitation for optimal and seamless care. A dedicated unit was established in the hospital, with a dedicated paging system. The geriatric trauma unit contributed to improved triage, improved quality of care, and safer discharge [22, 23].