Surgical Risk and Comorbidity in Older Urologic Patients

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Abstract

Almost two-thirds of urology operations are performed in patients 65 years and older. Older adults are at higher risk for complications and mortality compared with their younger counterparts. There are 2 primary methods to quantify surgical risk in these patients, frailty measurement and organ/comorbidity-based surgical risk calculators. A frailty assessment can be used to independently forecast the risk of postoperative complications. A paradigm shift in the preoperative assessment of the geriatric patient has occurred, which emphasizes the evaluation of frailty over more traditional surgical risk assessment, which uses comorbidities and single end-organ dysfunction to define risk.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Townsend, N. T., & Robinson, T. N. (2015, November 1). Surgical Risk and Comorbidity in Older Urologic Patients. Clinics in Geriatric Medicine. W.B. Saunders. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cger.2015.06.009

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