Ketofol for Preventing Postoperative Delirium in Elderly Patients

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2021
* Delirium is a cognitive disturbance characterized by acute and fluctuating impairment in attention and awareness. Although its incidence in the general surgical population is 2-3%, it has been reported to occur in up to 10-80% of high-risk patient groups. In addition, the occurrence of postoperative delirium is associated with considerably raised morbidity and mortality and increased healthcare resource expenditure. * In the general patient population, no prophylactic pharmacologic treatment has shown widespread effectiveness in preventing delirium. Several studies have failed to find a magic pharmacologic bullet for preventing delirium-ketamine, haloperidol, propofol, antipsychotic and benzodiazepine drugs have recently tested without a clear result of its effectiveness. * Dexmedetomidine is an attractive pharmacologic option because of its biological plausibility in modifying several known contributors to delirium. * Up to investigators\' knowledge, there is no study done to compare the effect of infusion of dexmedetomidine and ketofol mixture as prophylactic agents for high-risk patients as elderly patients who undergoing high-risk surgery such as intestinal obstruction surgery against postoperative delirium occurrence.
Epistemonikos ID: 8b5c2a1bd0135444fc02883bea1530ae9b0c1233
First added on: May 08, 2024