2020
DOI: 10.1007/s12028-020-01072-5
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Multimorbidity and Critical Care Neurosurgery: Minimizing Major Perioperative Cardiopulmonary Complications

Abstract: With increasing prevalence of chronic diseases, multimorbid patients have become commonplace in the neurosurgical intensive care unit (neuro-ICU), offering unique management challenges. By reducing physiological reserve and interacting with one another, chronic comorbidities pose a greatly enhanced risk of major postoperative medical complications, especially cardiopulmonary complications, which ultimately exert a negative impact on neurosurgical outcomes. These premises underscore the importance of perioperat… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…When doctors understand the contribution and interaction of frailty and comorbidities, they can optimize the patient’s status before or during surgeres. Regarding patients with multiple comorbidities, doctors should consider multi-drug therapies to prevent acute medical complications or balance the advantages and disadvantages of the risks caused by comorbidities as well as the benefits after TJA [ 28 , 29 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When doctors understand the contribution and interaction of frailty and comorbidities, they can optimize the patient’s status before or during surgeres. Regarding patients with multiple comorbidities, doctors should consider multi-drug therapies to prevent acute medical complications or balance the advantages and disadvantages of the risks caused by comorbidities as well as the benefits after TJA [ 28 , 29 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prevention, identification, monitoring, and directed treatment of secondary brain injury (brain edema and intracranial hypertension, cerebral hypoxia/ischemia, brain energy dysfunction, convulsive/nonconvulsive seizures) occur after the initial insult and surgical intervention (sometimes subclinical presentation) [21] and thus impact functional recovery and outcome of the patients. If clinical and/or neurologic deterioration occurs, prompt recognition is crucial because it may be the first indication of a serious and potentially fatal complication [3,4,22].…”
Section: Goals Of Postoperative Neuromonitoring: Guided-therapeutic Decisionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In patients with multiple systemic comorbidities, there is a decrease in physiological reserve due to chronic interaction of such comorbidities leading to increased risk of perioperative complications. Preoperative risk stratification and assessment of the severity of comorbidities can aid in tailoring the anesthetic plan to provide the best outcomes [ 2 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%