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Common Neurological Disease in the Elderly
associated with Long-Term Post Treatment
Mortality
Newswise, September 2010 — An in-depth
scientific article published in the Journal
of Neurosurgery reveals that a fairly common
disease in the elderly has a high mortality
rate long after patients have undergone what
is considered routine treatment.
Chronic subdural hematoma in the elderly:
not a benign disease reviews the cases of
209 patients with chronic subdural hematoma
(CSDH). Authors are Lucas Bernardes Miranda,
MD, Ernest Braxton, MD, Joseph Hobbs, MD,
and Matthew R. Quigley, MD, Department of
Neurosurgery, Allegheny General Hospital,
Pittsburgh. The accompanying editorial is
authored by Kim J. Burchiel, MD, Department
of Neurosurgery, Oregon Health and Science
University, Portland, Oregon. The article
and editorial are posted online at:
http://thejns.org/toc/jns/forthcoming.
CSDH is relatively common, especially among
the elderly, with an estimated incidence of
7.4/100,000 in that group. A CSDH is an old
clot of blood on the surface of the brain
beneath its outer covering.
This is more common in the elderly because
of normal brain shrinkage that occurs with
aging. This shrinkage stretches and weakens
the bridging veins, so that even minor head
trauma can cause tearing of blood vessels
over the brain surface, resulting in a slow
accumulation of blood over several days to
weeks. Left untreated, CSDH can cause severe
physical, emotional, and cognitive
impairments.
“CSDH is a frequently encountered problem in
neurosurgical practice and the perception is
that it is a benign disease, with
easy-to-treat lesions.
"As
such, the majority of neurosurgical
literature has been limited to short-term
outcome analysis, focusing primarily on
types of surgical interventions, the effect
of anticoagulants, and whether drains should
be left in place. We believe our research is
the first long-term analysis of CSDH in an
elderly-only population,” said Dr. Quigley.
The authors retrospectively reviewed the
cases of 209 patients treated for CSDH at
Allegheny General Hospital between September
2000 and September 2008. The neurological
status on admission was normal in 166
patients, drowsy with mild deficits in 31,
and comatose in 12. Additional key patient
demographics:
•Gender: 132 men (63 percent), 77 women (37
percent)
•Mean patient age: 80.6 years (range 65-96
years)
•Medication: 48 patients were receiving
antiplatelet agents, 31 were receiving
Coumadin, and 2 were receiving both.
•Treatment: Bur holes in 21 patients,
twist-drill closed-system drainage in 44,
and craniotomies in 72. An additional 72
patients received conservative, nonsurgical
treatment.
Mortality and Follow-up
•Thirty-five patients (16.7 percent died in
the hospital, 130 were discharged to
rehabilitation or a skilled care facility,
and 44 returned home.
•Following discharge, the mean survival for
the remaining 174 patients was 4.4 years.
•Long-term follow-up extended to a maximum
of 8.3 years (mean 1.45 years).
•One hundred-forty (83 percent) of the
patients returned to the clinic one month
post discharge and their brain CT scans
revealed either stable or improved status.
Noteworthy is that 72 patients underwent
conservative treatment without surgical
intervention. The authors found that
survival was not related to the type of
surgical intervention or to whether surgery
was performed. Furthermore, the type of
intervention, size of the CSDH, amount of
shift, the presence of bilateral CSDHs, and
anticoagulant use had no significant impact
on the short- or long-term mortality. In the
Cox proportional hazards model, only age and
discharge to home were related to survival.
“While the 16.7 percent hospital mortality
rate was just slightly higher than in other
CSDH studies, what stood out was that this
rate climbed to 26.3 percent and 32 percent
respectively, at 6-month and 1-year
follow-up, after what was considered
successful treatment,” said Dr. Quigley.
“Another surprising finding was that the
hazard ratios derived from data showed that
younger patients (age range 60–69 years) had
the highest mortality rate, with the risk
progressively diminishing in each successive
decade to the tenth,” added Dr. Burchiel.
The authors liken the continued increased
mortality following apparently successful
treatment of CSDH to the similar and widely
reported phenomenon in patients who have
undergone successful surgery for hip
fracture. In light of the hazard ratio age
findings, the authors surmise that if CSDH
is indeed a “marker” of underlying disease,
the younger one experiences this disease,
the more compromised one’s health will be
relative to others in that age group.
“As with hip fracture, we assume that CSDH
unmasks underlying medical conditions and
exacerbates them.
"Although
additional studies are required, given our
long-term outcome findings, this disease
should be reassessed by physicians and
family members from a “benign” disease to
one with potentially grave patient
consequences,” concluded Dr. Quigley.
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Founded in 1944, the Journal of
Neurosurgery, the official scientific
journal of the AANS, has been recognized by
neurosurgeons and related medical
specialists worldwide for its authoritative
and cutting-edge clinical articles,
laboratory research papers, case reports,
literature reviews, technical notes, book
reviews, and more. Each successive
editor-in-chief – from Louise Eisenhardt to
the current editor, John A. Jane, Sr. – has
played a key role in shaping a publication
that stays on the cutting edge of a
constantly advancing specialty. Each
manuscript is reviewed by at least three
editorial board members, in addition to the
Editor and occasionally one or more expert
reviewers.