Delirium Clinical Trial
Official title:
Sleep and Cognition After Ambulatory Hip and Knee Arthroplasty
Sleep and rest are key elements in postoperative rehabilitation and recovery. There are
complex relations between major surgery, sleep disturbance and complications. Major surgery
leeds to severe postoperative sleep disturbances, initially reducing REM sleep time and
disturbing the remaining sleep stages. Major surgery is again a risk factor for postoperative
delirium and other cognitive impairment. The underlying mechanisms includes pain, opioid
medication, sleep disturbances and neuroinflammation, along with external factors as noise
during hospitalisation. The physiologic stress from sleep disturbances and sleep deprivation
is associated with blood-brain barrier impairment, inflammation, decreased restitution,
altered nociceptive function. Likewise, undiagnosed and untreated sleep apnea is a risk for
postoperative complications and is itself affected by anesthesia and some analgesics (i.a.
opioids).
Fast-track surgery development has led to restitution period shortening, optimized pain
management reducing opioid use, postoperative inflammatory stress response reduction and less
delirium. Evolution of hip and knee arthroplasty(THA/TKA), organisation, optimized pain
management and pharmacologic modification of inflammatory response by high dose steroid has
permitted to perform these surgeries in an outpatient setting.
Previous studies of fast-track THA/TKA using multimodal opioid-sparring analgesia, however
neither using high dose steroids nor in an out patient setting, have demonstrated REM sleep
period reduction from a normal range of 18% preoperatively to 1% postoperatively. However,
changes in sleep architecture after THA/TKA in at setting attempting to minimise abnormal
sleep by means of ambulatory surgery added to perioperative reduction of inflammatory
response to surgery, pain and opioid use by high dose steroid, haven't been studied.
The purpose of this study is to investigate how much an optimized ambulatory THA/TKA ,
reducing pain and inflammatory response to surgery and opioid use by high doses steroid can
conserve the preoperative sleep architecture.
n/a
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