The management of these often frail elderly patients, with more comorbidities and declining functional capacities, is more complex and justifies a specific, tailored approach. Age is also associated with an increasing prevalence of gallstones. The disadvantages of "cold" surgery (longer hospital stay, higher cost, risk of disease recurrence in the interim, difficult surgery with more scar tissue due to repeated inflammation) have to be weighed against the high operative risk in the case of emergency surgery, leading to strict criteria for early cholecystectomy. These criteria are rarely met in geriatric patients, who thus enter a hospital cycle whose impact on morbidity and mortality, as well as on loss of autonomy, has been demonstrated in this population. What's more, the deteriorating general condition of frail elderly patients means that a number of them end up being definitively rejected for surgery, despite an initial strategy of cold cholecystectomy.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
424
Simonet Anne Clarisse
Nîmes, France
Rate of patients with an initial cold cholecystectomy strategy who did not undergo surgery, died or underwent emergency surgery
Percentage
Time frame: Up to 6 months, from date of first collection to date of end of collection
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.