Odour identification as a marker for postoperative cognitive dysfunction: A pilot study

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Abstract

The onset of postoperative cognitive dysfunction is delayed in some elderly surgical patients and the condition may persist. Increasing age is a risk factor for both postoperative cognitive dysfunction and dementia. Major surgery may unmask an underlying dementia; we report findings of a pilot study designed to inform this hypothesis. Impaired odour identification ability is a characteristic of the preclinical phase of some neuro-degenerative diseases. This pilot study was designed to establish whether odour identification deficit is a marker for postoperative cognitive dysfunction, particularly in elderly patients genetically predisposed to develop late-onset Alzheimer's disease. We found no association between odour identification ability and post-operative cognitive dysfunction in 53 patients aged 62-86, undergoing major non-cardiac surgery under general anaesthesia. Our pilot study showed that a high number of patients genetically predisposed to develop Alzheimer's disease is required to test the utility of odour identification as a marker for postoperative cognitive dysfunction. © 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Rentowl, P., & Hanning, C. D. (2004). Odour identification as a marker for postoperative cognitive dysfunction: A pilot study. Anaesthesia, 59(4), 337–343. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.2004.03678.x

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