22 research outputs found

    Frailty and post-operative delirium influence on functional status in patients with hip fracture: the GIOG 2.0 study

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    Background: This study analyzes the effect of frailty and Post-Operative Delirium (POD) on the functional status at hospital discharge and at 4-month follow-up in patients with hip fracture (HF). Methods: Multicenter prospective observational study of older patients with HF admitted to 12 Italian Orthogeriatric centers (July 2019-August 2022). POD was assessed using the 4AT. A 26-item Frailty Index (FI) was created using data collected on admission. The outcome measures were Cumulated Ambulation Score (CAS) ≤ 2 at discharge and a telephone-administered CAS ≤ 2 after 4 months. Poisson regression models were used to assess the effect of frailty and POD on outcomes. Results: 984 patients (median age 84 years, IQR = 79–89) were recruited: 480 (48.7%) were frail at admission, 311 (31.6%) developed POD, and 158 (15.6%) had both frailty and POD. In a robust Poisson regression, frailty alone (Relative Risk, RR = 1.56, 95% Confidence Intervals, CI 1.19–2.04, p = 0.001) and its combination with POD (RR = 2.57, 95% CI 2.02–3.26, p < 0.001) were associated with poor functional status at discharge. At 4-month follow-up, the combination of frailty with POD (RR 3.65, 95% CI 1.85–7.2, p < 0.001) increased the risk of poor outcome more than frailty alone (RR 2.38, 95% CI 1.21–4.66, p < 0.001). Conclusions: POD development exacerbates the negative effect that frailty exerts on functional outcomes in HF patients

    Poor diagnostic performance of tilt testing in hypertensive patients with unexplained syncope.

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    Syncope is a common condition. Tilt testing with sublingual nitroglycerin (TT-TNT) provides a test with good specificity and positivity rate in young and old patients. Its use in hypertensive patients with unexplained syncope has not been validated. The aims of this study were to evaluate the positivity rate, specificity and tolerability of TT-TNT in hypertensive patients with unexplained syncope. Five hundred and ten subjects (mean age 55 years) were enrolled, 388 patients with unexplained syncope (73 hypertensive and 315 normotensive) and 122 controls (59 hypertensive and 63 normotensive). All subjects underwent TT-TNT. The responses were classified as positive, negative or exaggerated (aspecific). In hypertensive patients, the usual hypotensive therapy was taken on the day of the test. In hypertensive controls, the positive responses were higher than in normotensives (19% vs 6%, P65 years. TT was well tolerated, and no serious side effects occurred. TT potentiated with TNT has a lower positivity rate and specificity in hypertensive than in normotensive patients with syncope

    Incidence and predictors of syncope recurrence after cardiac pacing in patients with carotid sinus syndrome

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    Background Cardiac pacing is the treatment of choice for cardioinhibitory carotid sinus syndrome (CSS), but syncope recurrence occurs in up to 20% of patients within 3 years. The present study aims at assessing incidence and identifying predictors of syncope recurrence in patients receiving pacing therapy for CSS. Methods The Syncope Clinics of two large regional hospitals in Northern Italy, both following European Syncope Guidelines, combined to perform this study. Retrospective analysis of 3127 consecutive patients undergoing carotid sinus massage (CSM) was performed 2004–2014. Ten-second supine and standing CSM was systematically assessed in patients aged >40 years with suspected reflex syncope as part of the initial evaluation. Syncope recurrence was investigated in those paced for CSS having >6 months' available follow-up. Data were collected from clinical records and patient interviews. Results CSS was diagnosed in 261 patients (8.3%). Pacemakers were implanted in 158, with follow-up data available in 112: 19 (17%) experienced 73 syncope recurrences during a mean follow-up of 89 ± 42 months, yielding an incidence of 0.5 episodes per patient/year. Prodrome, predisposing situations preceding syncope and chronic nitrate therapy were more frequent in patients reporting recurrence. Prodrome and predisposing situations remained independent predictors of post-implantation recurrence on multivariable analysis. Conclusions CSS is a frequent cause of syncope, if CSM is performed during the initial evaluation. Most patients treated by pacing remain asymptomatic during long-term follow-up. In those who have recurrence, its incidence is very low. Prodrome and predisposing situations are predictors of post-implantation recurrence, suggesting presence of hypotensive susceptibility
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