Title: Geriatric Trauma
1Geriatric Trauma
- Alan Sori, MD
- St. Josephs Regional Medical Center
- Paterson, NJ
2Patients
- 65 yo female falls on a bus severe brain injury
- In ICU found to have a prolonged QT interval
- Echo severe cardiomyopathy
- Needs an ICD
- 75 yo male falls- two broken ribs.
- Multiple medical co-morbidities
- Develops pneumonia, dies two weeks after injury
3What is Geriatric Trauma?
- No. 5 cause of death for age gt 65.
- Mortality in most series averages 15 to 30.
- 4 to 5 X mortality of younger patients.
- Mortality start to increase at age 45 for males.
- ACS - MTOS
4Geriatric Trauma - Questions
- What is old?
- Does age matter and what age?
- Physiology of aging.
- Triage of elderly trauma victims.
- Injury patterns and physiologic responses.
- What is the optimal resuscitation of the older
trauma patient? - Outcomes in the elderly trauma patient?
5Geriatric Bias
- Documented bias in medical care
- Rehabilitation placement.
- Breast cancer management.
- Thrombolytics.
- Trauma triage.
- Therapeutic Nihilism
6Epidemiology
- Age gt 65 12.5 population (30 million)
- 2020 - 52 Million (20 population)
- At age 85 life expectancy is 5 to 7 years.
- Better health and increased activities.
- 65 are hospitalized for trauma at 2X the rate of
younger patients - 25 of all trauma deaths
- ICU beds 15 of all hospital beds and 30 of
hospital costs
7Epidemiology
- gt65 use 33 of all health care dollars and 25 of
all trauma care money. - Medicare - DRG based- grossly underpays hospital
costs for trauma, esp. in the elderly - Avg. reimbursement 40 to 65 of total hospital
costs. - Increased age and ISS - worse reimbursement.
8Geriatric Recidivists
- Washington state Medicare population.
- gt 65 injured - 2X more likely to be admitted with
a new injury than uninjured person in next 24
months. - ISS 16 to 24 - new injury risk 4x normal
population. - Inc risk in patients with COPD, liver disease,
age.
J. Trauma 1996 41(6) p. 952
9Physiology of Aging
- Aging is the progressive loss of individual organ
function. - Gradual and continuous.
- Not directly related to age.
- Significant age related mortality differences are
apparent by age 40 in males. - Co-morbidities 15 at age 35, 70 at 75.
J. Trauma 1990 30(12) p. 1476
10Physiology of Aging
- The extent of physiologic alterations and he
onset of those alterations are highly variable. - Most elderly well compensated for changes
- in aging but have very limited physiologic
reserve that becomes evident during times of
stress or illness.
11Cardiovascular
- Most prominently affected.
- Myocardial degeneration
- Inelastic heart - decreased cardiac output.
- Diastolic dysfunction.
- Altered conduction system
- Maximal HR decreases
- Beta adrenergic receptor function decrease.
- Coronary artery disease.
- Hypertension - Meds
12Pulmonary System
- Decreased functional reserve.
- Thoracic cage - more brittle, stiff.
- Decreased compliance
- Increased work of breathing.
- Dec. alveolar ventilation
- Inc. V/Q mismatch.
13Renal System
- 40 to 50 nephron loss by age 65.
- RBF decreases to 50
- Dec. GFR, CrClr.
- Serum creatinine - poor indicator of renal
function. - Dec ADH sens, dec. thirst - chronic dehydration.
14Musculoskeletal
- Dec. muscle mass and strength.
- Progressive deterioration of cartilage and
ligaments - starts at age 30.
- Age related bone loss.
- Dec. reaction times.
- Widened, unsteady gate.
15Misc.
- Glucose intolerance.
- Dec. LBM, BMR, need for calories.
- Need for other nutrients unchanged.
- Vit A, Vit C, Zinc deficiencies.
- Immune senescence
- T cell and B cell function.
16Misc.
- Thyroid hormone dec, tissue response decreases.
- Increased intra-cranial space - atrophy.
- Increased movement of brain during injury.
- Increased risk of subdural hematomas.
- Decreased cognitive ability, memory and judgment.
- Senescence of senses
17Etiology of Trauma
- Age 65 to 75 - MVCs - most common
- Elderly have the highest rate of accidents /
miles driven - Age 75 - falls number one.
- MV vs Pedestrians
- Suicide - biphasic incidence
- Increasing incidence in males gt65.
- Increased incidence of penetrating trauma, elder
abuse.
18Falls
- Most common mechanism overall.
- 65 30 sustain a fall each year requiring
medical treatment - 85 50 fall each year
- 40 of all nursing home admissions related to
falls. - Most falls are single level or low bilevel.
J. Am. Geriatric Soc. 1986 34 p 119
19Falls
- Risk Factors
- Dementia, visual impairments
- Lower extremity and foot diseases
- Gait and balance problems.
- Meds, med. problems, postural hypotension, neuro-
muscular disease. - Usual falls - ladders, roofs, stairs
- Injury patterns are more severe for all levels of
falls.
20Falls
- Population based study
- 336 people average age 78
- 108 (32) fell in past year
- 48 - once, 29 - twice, 25 - three
- 77 falls at home.
- Risk factors
- sedative use - Palmomental reflex
- Cognitive impairment - Foot problems
- LE disability - Balance / gait
NEJM 1988 319(26) p.1701
21Falls
- Falls 159 / 333 adms- age 65 (48)
- 83 falls age lt 65 (7 total)
- ISS gt 15 50(32) elderly, 12 (15) young.
- Falls are 2/3 of all elderly w ISS gt 15
- Same level w ISS gt15 - old (30), young (4).
- Fall deaths 11 (7), younger - 4
- 11/20 deaths overall due to falls (55)
J. Trauma 2001 50(1) p. 116
22MVCs
- Age 75 - second highest crash rate
- Highest accident rate per miles driven.
- Highest fatal accident rate.
- Changes in perception, judgment, decision making
ability and reaction times. - MV vs pedestrians
- Most severe of all elderly injuries.
- Highest fatalities
- Majority occur in cross walks.
23MVA- Driver Characteristics
- I year period - Level 1 trauma center
- 84 drivers age gt60
- 67/ 84 (80) - at fault according to police.
- Running stop signs, red lights, failure to yield
- most common - 35 ( 42) - single car crash.
- Daytime- 80
- Good weather - 95
- ETOH - 5
- Low speed / intersections common
Am.Surgeon 1995 61(5) p. 935
24Elderly Abuse
- Estimated 1 million cases / year.
- Physical violence
- May not be as apparent as child abuse.
- Emotional abuse
- Threats of abandonment or institutionalization.
- Material exploitation.
- Neglect (may be unintentional)
- Dehydration / malnutrition, mental status changes.
25Elderly Abuse
- 2020 elderly - 3.7 reported abuse
- 2.2 physical, 1.1 emotional
- 2/3 spouse, 1/3 adult child
- Risk Factors
- Physical frailty and cognitive impairment.
- Living with abuser
- Substance abusers, mental disease.
- Adult kids who are financially dependent.
26Mortality -Factors
- Consistent
- TS (lt 7)
- SBP lt 90
- Shock
- RR lt 10
- Head injury
- Base deficit
- Less Consistent
- ISS
- Male sex
- Ped vs MV
- Non trauma center admission
- PEC
- Pulmonary complications
J. Trauma 1998 45(5) p 873, J. Trauma 1990
30(12) p 1476 J. Trauma 1999 46(4) p 702 CCM
1986 14(8) p 681 Arch. Surg 1994 129(4) p 448,
J. Trauma 2002 52(1) p 79
27Pre Existing Conditions
- Elderly patients are more likely to have
underlying medical problems that affect survival. - PECs may affect survival independent of age or
injury severity. - May be underlying cause of an injury.
- Need to be treated aggressively.
- Coumadin does not adversely effect mort.
28PECs
- Hepatic
- Renal
- ARF as a complication is the most lethal.
- Cancer
- CHF
- COPD
- Diabetes
- Dementia
J. Trauma 1992 32(2) p 236 1998 45(4)
p 805 2002 52(2) p 242
29Triage
- Philips - Florida- statewide
- Overtriage 7.5, undertriage - 71
- Triage tool identified only 103 / 355 major
trauma patients. - lt 65 - 11 / 33.
- Triage guidelines were most sensitive to GSW and
least sensitive to falls.
J. Trauma 1996 40(2) p 278
30Triage
- Compliance studies
- MD - statewide study
- Injury factors- high compliance
- Physiology, mechanism - poor.
- 15- 54 - 2X more likely to be triaged to a TC.
- Compliance decreases with increasing age.
- Portland - city wide study
- Undertriage- 21 (lt 65- 15, gt65- 56)
- Non TC deaths- elderly with ISS 1- 9
J. Trauma 1995 39(5) p 922 1999 46(1) p 168
31Brain Injury and the Elderly
- Age related mortality increases sharply at age
60. - Prognosis depend on initial severity and age.
- Subdural, contusions and SAH more likely.
- Epidural, skull fractures - uncommon.
- 2 or 3 injuries common on CT scan
- High incidence of associated injuries- chest most
common, cspine, upper extremities.
32Brain Injury and the Elderly
- GCS lt 7 - high mortality, survivors are all
severely disabled or PVS. - Death rate is biphasic.
- Early from head injury, late from MSOF
Arch.Surg. 1993 128(7) p 787 J. Trauma 1996
41(6) p 957
33Rib Fractures
- Very common injury in elderly- due to brittle rib
cage - Most commonly due to MV vs peds, MVCs.
- Compared to younger patients
- ISS same
- Increased mortality, ICU days, LOS, Vent days.
- Mortality increased at 5 ribs fxs. (35 vs 10)
- Mortality decreased with epidural use.
J. Trauma 2000 48(6) p 1040
34In younger patients, nature often saves the day
after minor surgical errors. In the aged, every
error is a major danger in life.
35Aging and Surgery
- 1921 Oschner
- Herniorraphy was not indicated in patients
greater than age 50. - Currently - age 65 in general surgery
- 1/3 of all operative cases.
- 50 of all surgical emergencies.
- 75 of all operative deaths.
36Surgical Risks
- 148 patients for elective surgery - all cleared
by internists- had preop swan. - 20 had normal physiology - no mortality.
- 94 had mild to moderate dysfunction - 8.5
operative mortality. - 34 had severe dysfunction
- 7 had lesser ops- survived.
- 8 had scheduled surgery- all died.
- Preop evaluation did not correlate with
physiologic parameters
JAMA 1980 243(13) p 1350
37Initial Evaluation
- History
- PMH
- Premorbid functioning
- Medications
- Drug - drug interactions, cause of injury
- PMD
38Initial Evaluation
- Physical Exam
- Elderly patients have less dramatic physiologic
response to injury. - Don't be fooled by a patient that appears to be
stable and minimally injured. - 80 yo female in MVA, no bleeding, poor perfusion
status but BP, HR ok. Swan- CI of lt 1L/min
39Resuscitation
- Very little literature on trauma resuscitation in
elderly patients. - Contradictory
- Not very current
- Need for better studies
- Avoid therapeutic nihilism
40Preop Monitoring
- 70 patients with hip fractures
- randomized to preop monitoring and optimization
with SG catheter - Nonmonitored- 67 (40 to 89)
- Monitored - 78 ( 40 to 95)
- No difference in premorbid conditions.
- Mortality was 2.9 vs 29
- Cause of deaths not listed
- Operation was at 3.5 days vs 7 days
J. Trauma 1985 25(4) p. 309
41Resuscitation
- 1985- 60 elderly trauma patients at Kings County
- 44 mortality, 85 in high risk. - Ped vs MVA, SBP lt 130, acidosis (pH lt 7.3), head
injury, multiple fractures. - 1986 - invasive monitoring - ED to ICU was 5.5
hours - 93 mortality - 1987 - Monitoring early before diagnostic workup
- ED to ICU- 47 mortality
J. Trauma 1990 30(2) p. 129
42Resuscitation
- CI lt 3.5 L / min or MVO2sat lt 60
- Fluids, blood, inotropes, afterload reducing
agents. - Hct- 35
- CI gt 4L / min.
- Increased mortality
- ISS not calculated.
- No group comparisons available.
- Hayes, MA NEJM 1994 330(24) p 1717
J. Trauma 1990 30(2) p. 129
43Therapeutics
- Imaging.
- Early and often.
- Early tracheostomy?
- Pain management
- Epidurals ?
- Vena cava filters ?
44Pain Management
- Myth Elderly patients experience less pain
- Realities
- Acute and chronic pain is common in the elderly.
- Pain in the elderly is often under diagnosed and
under treated. - Pain is often responsible for agitation, delirium
and depression.
45Pain Management
- Narcotics - elderly are more sensitive to pain
relieving aspects. - MSO4 - still gold standard.
- Altered pharmacodynamics - inc. half life.
- Need bowel regimen with narcotics.
- Avoid Darvon (propoxyphene), Talwin
(pentazocine), Demerol (meperidine) and long
acting drugs. - NSAIDs - side effects more severe and common in
elderly.
46Outcomes
- Oreskovich 100 patients over 60 over a 2 year
period at a Level 1 trauma center. - age 74 Falls 64
- Independent- 94 MVC 8
- Home assistance- 6 MVC vs Ped 9
- ISS - 19 Burns 13
- Mortality- 15 Assaults - 4
- Discharge
- Independent 8 , Home assist. 20, NH 72
J.Trauma 1984 24(7) p. 565
47Outcomes
- vanAalst - 98 pts age 65 with ISS gt16
- 48 alive 1 to 6 yrs later (49)
- Assessed independence and functionality.
- Ind / Maintained - 8
- Ind / declined - 24
- Moderately dependent - 10
- Custodial - 6
J. Trauma 1991 31(8) p. 1096
48Outcomes
- DeMaria - 63 patients, 97 independent
- Discharge
- 33 independent, 37 home but dependent
- 19 (30) to NH
- 12/19 NH patients went to home after 3-4 months.
- Age 80 survivors , n 12.
- 4 required permanent NH
- 8 home independent or with assistance.
J. Trauma 1987 27(11) p. 1200
49Outcomes
- Why the big difference between Oreskovich and
vanAalst / DeMaria? - Falls- 66 falls vs lt40
- Falls are a marker of severe underlying cardiac,
pulmonary and neurologic diseases. - Death may often be preceded by a cluster of
falls. - No 1 cause of NH admissions (40)
50Outcomes
- Battista - 23 mortality / 93 independent
- 47 of survivors dead at 2.5 years
- 83 of those alive at home alone or with family.
- 10 retirement home, 4 at NH.
- Shapiro - 22 mortality
- 53 home
- 14 home assistance
- 20 rehab
- 8 NH
J. Trauma 1998 44(4) p.618, Am. Surg. 1994
60(9) p.696
51Summary / Recommendations
- Advanced age is associated with increased
mortality at all injury levels. - Elderly have higher ISS for comparable mechanism
of injury. - There may be fewer physiologic abnormalities than
expected for injuries. - PEC are associated with worse outcomes for each
level of injury.
52Summary / Recommendations
- Elderly trauma victims should be triaged to
trauma centers - There should be a lower threshold for activation
of the trauma team for elderly trauma patients. - Blood gas analysis should be obtained for any
patient with a significant injury or mechanism.
53Summary / Recommendations
- Aggressive hemodynamic monitoring and
resuscitation may be beneficial in the elderly
trauma patient. - Shock, BD lt -6
- AIS gt 3, high risk mechanism of injury
- Uncertain cardiac or volume status
- Optimize cardiac output and O2 delivery.
54Recommendations
- Advanced age alone is NOT a predictor of poor
outcome and should NOT be used as a factor to
deny or limit care. - Up to 85 of survivors may return to independent
living. - Limiting care may be considered when
- GCS lt 8 TS lt 7 RR lt 10