Effects of elective surgery, anesthesia on MCI due to Lewy Body diseas
My husband, 73, has MCI due to Lewy Body disease. He is a candidate for abdominal hernia repair surgery. He is currently physically active, and the risk of not repairing the hernia is (at least) a reduction in vigorous exercise, which has as much—or more—positive effect as the Adderal and Donepazil. He also has autonomic problems, including loss of smell and urinary incontinence, and I wonder if there may be risk to bowel function without repair. But, there is risk of MCI- related decline and adverse events with and after surgery and anesthesia. If we wait until the hernia is intolerable, he may be in a worse cognitive state, and cooperation, adverse events, and decline could be worse than if we did it now. There is also the issue of surgeon and anesthesiologist understanding risks and management due to MCI/LBD. Anybody have experience with this?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Caregivers: Dementia Support Group.
nelms, You asked how long my LO was confused. He was confused for about 2 hours. Fortunately, he came home right after surgery. What confused him the most was his catheter. Keep in mind, he had only been diagnosed 5 months earlier. But I had learned a lot about the interaction of meds and LBD, so I was able to discuss this with the anesthesiologist. Now, nearly 5 years later, I won’t put him through another surgery unless it was vital.
@nelms We had confused patients all the time!! But we never made a distinction between types of dementia. We just treated them all the same: insure their safety, have them talk with their spouse, and even have someone they know come and sit with them.