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Senior surgery often means memory loss

LAS VEGAS, Oct. 26 (UPI) -- Nearly half of all U.S. seniors who have major surgery experience measurable "cognitive decline" within two years of the procedure.

Duke University Medical Center researchers, speaking to a Las Vegas medical conference Tuesday, also said that, besides the two-year measurement, 59 percent of patients experienced cognitive decline immediately after their procedure. These patients are at the highest risk for long-term cognitive decline. Three months after surgery, 34 percent of patients had measurable cognitive declines.

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The phenomena is well established for those who have had heart surgery, but this study extends to non-heart procedures.

"Our study showed that elderly patients experience a high prevalence and persistence of cognitive decline after major, non-cardiac surgery, characterized by early improvement followed by later decline," said Duke anesthesiologist Terri Monk.

"The issue of cognitive decline after surgery in the elderly population is a very important one that has not received adequate study.

This pattern of a steep decline in cognitive function after surgery, followed by short-term improvement and a longer term decline, mirrors the findings of an earlier Duke study of patients undergoing heart surgery.

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