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Review
. 1998 Aug:91 Spec No 4:7-16; discussion 29-30.

[Preoperative management of patients with high-risk cardiovascular conditions]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 9834833
Review

[Preoperative management of patients with high-risk cardiovascular conditions]

[Article in French]
J P Broustet et al. Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss. 1998 Aug.

Abstract

The growing numbers of elderly and cardiac patients are the consequence of progress in the prevention of the complications of coronary artery and valvular heart disease by surgery and revascularisation and improved treatment of hypertension which delays target organ complications by at least fifteen years. The elderly are particularly exposed to surgical risk: nearly half the patients with ischaemic heart disease die of cancer; a high proportion of elderly people require orthopaedic surgery either as an emergency (fractured femur) or as a standard procedure (knee surgery); nearly a quarter of patients requiring peripheral vascular surgery have coronary artery disease which may be silent. A preoperative consultation with the anaesthetist has been made compulsory, except in emergencies, giving time for preoperative investigations. The decrees of the Court of Cassation have also affected the traditional relationship of trust between patients and their doctors, leading to an increase in the cost of preoperative investigations without an accurate assessment of their benefits with regards to postoperative complications and the cost that they entail. Contrary to present tendencies reflected in the literature, the screening of risks should be simplified: clinical history and examination and resting ECG, often completed by stress testing, are sufficient in the large majority of cases. More importance should be attributed to the functional status than to the lesions. When the cardiac disease is asymptomatic, the chances are that it will remain so during and after surgery.... The main difficulty is not in identifying high risk patients: it is preventing cardiovascular events when surgery is unavoidable. The experience and collaboration between the quartet of anaesthetist, surgeon, cardiologist and general practitioner, are much more useful than the very incomplete bibliographical data concerning this side of the problem.

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