The preoperative visit should begin with a detailed review of the patient's medical history, current functional status of all vital organs, and medication list. Basic laboratory testing is not warranted for older subjects. Some additional issues more prevalent among elderly patients should also be raised. For example, whether the patient's living situation is capable of providing the support necessary for a successful recovery should be explored.
Elderly patients may require a long time to return to their preoperative levels of function.
Older patients' expectations about surgery may be much different than the expectations of their younger counterparts, and the anesthesiologist must be careful not to judge a patient's decision making based on more typical goals.
Polypharmacy and drug interaction are significant problems for older patients.
Dehydration, elder abuse, and malnutrition (vitamin D, vitamin B12, inadequate caloric intake, poor oral hygiene) are all more common in very old individuals than generally appreciated. Nutritional status is underappreciated as a risk factor for surgery. (Albumin is as sensitive an index for mortality or morbidity as any other single indicator, including the American Society of Anesthesiologists status.)
Smaller doses are needed for the induction of general anesthesia in older patients. A given blood level of propofol causes a greater decrease in brain activity in older patients.
Although swings in blood pressure may not be desirable, there is no evidence that even major, but brief, changes in blood pressure lead to adverse outcomes.
Whether general or neuraxial anesthesia is used, induction and maintenance of anesthesia commonly result in a significant decrease in systemic blood pressure, more so than typically occurs in younger patients.
The goals of emergence and the immediate postoperative period are no different for an elderly than a young patient.
Analgesia is a major goal, and there is no evidence that pain is any less severe or any less detrimental in older patients than in younger ones. Elderly patients sometimes underreport their pain level and may be more tolerant of acute pain.
Older patients have more difficulty with visual analog scoring systems than verbal or numeric systems. If the patient is cognitively impaired, communication of pain is further impaired; indeed, demented patients often experience severe pain after hip surgery, but even mild cognitive impairment can lead to problems with pain assessment or with use of a patient-controlled analgesia machine.