Anesthesia related cognitive decline, specifically dysnomia

Posted by pb50 @pb50, Jan 5 2:42pm

I am a 73yo woman who retired 18 mos ago.
Almost exactly a year later, a pulmonary nodule we had been following in annual lung screening CTs as it slowly increased from 6mm to 14mm over 4 years, and at that last size the pulmonologist and cardiothoracic surgeon determined it was time to remove it in a wedge resection if it proved benign, followed by lobectomy if malignant. While that determination was made I remained under anesthesia. So in my case, it was quite a while.

Since the surgery i have slowly become
Aware that I have a material decline in specific brain function. It’s not as if I have a global cognitive decline. I don’t seem to have decline in executive function for instance.
But I have significant dysnomia. Not just names of people - rather names of “things” - but it’s easier to describe as a word to reference anything that functions as a label or reference term. Like names of diseases or an object. Virtually anything.

I had meetings over last couple of days with a hand surgeon to discuss surgery for duypuytren contracture (I have RA) and I inquired whether it could be done under a local nerve block and we got into a discussion about anesthesia related cognitive issues. He said that it sometimes takes more than a year for “brain fog” to clear. I guess fog is a good term, for I have become relatively sedentary and withdrawn since the surgery.

Concurrently I find that as a 73 yo patient, I am discounted and some docs - not all thank goodness - show little effort to even appear engaged. I have found a couple of Docs
- the hand surgeon and a new oncologist - who will discuss it.
So in that context I’d like to ask if any of you are experiencing cognitive or personality issues following general anesthesia? Am I a population of One, or a member of a much larger population?

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Brain & Nervous System Support Group.

@jodyb

I’ve had several surgeries, and maybe 6-12 procedures where anesthesia or partial anesthesia was used.
Each time, I felt like it took 6 months to a year to come totally out of the fog!
I’ve noted that people (about 65 & older) in my large extended family often have difficulties after their surgeries… just a bit off.
And have noted that in 80+ people, a surgery often seems to bring on a decline they don’t recover from.
Just on principle, many of us have worked to not have another surgery!

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I have had the same observations with members of my family. Two aunts had surgery around 80 and had cognitive decline they never recovered from.

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