Korean J Anesthesiol.
1975 Dec;8(2):205-210.
Geriatric Anesthesia -past 10 years-
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Anesthesiology, Catholic Medical College, Seoul, Korea.
Abstract
- It is a fallacy on the part of the anesthesiologist and surgeon to think that the same principles of anesthesia and surgery apply in the younger patient as in the aged who have a multiplicity of preoperative pathologic and physiologic states which may affect them during surgery and postoperatively and which must be considered in their preoperative preparation. Changes of importance are related to diminished cardiac, pulmonary, renal and hepatic reserves. With this steady increase of candidates for geriatric anesthesia, it is necessary that periodic reviews be presented so that the problems associated with the management of this enlarging group of patients may be elucidated. In this paper presented 1, 208 cases of geriatric anesthesia during 1964~1973 (10 years) at St. Mary's hospital and were analysed. Results were as follows; 1. Number of the total operative cases were 24, 970, among them over 60 years of age were 1,208 cases. Incidence was 4.9%. 2. Among the 1,208 cases, 967 cases were over 60~69 years of age (80%), 210 cases were over 70~79 years of age (17.4%) and 31 cases were over 80 years of age (2.6%). 3. Emergency versus elective surgical cases re 29.1% versus 78.9% 4. Among the 1,208 cases, 726 cases were general surgery(60.1%), each of 138 cases were orthopedics and urological ones(11.4%). 5. Inhalation anesthesia was performed 1,127 cases(90.4%) and spinal anesthesia was 29 cases(2.3%). 6. Halothane and methoxyflurane anesthesia were markedly increased after 1970 instead of diethyl ether anesthesia. 7. ECG was checked 42.2% of the cases preoperatively. 8. Post-anesthetic related death was not evaluated because of the insufficient record.