Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Geriartic Medicine

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 45

Geriatric medicine

Dr. Sarah Alaa Osman MSC, BCPS, BCNSP


• BSC of pharmaceutical science – Misr International university (MIU) 2007
• Board certified pharmacotherapy specialist (BCPS-2010)
• MSC of clinical pharmacy- Ain Shams university 2012
• American Board clinical nutrition specialist (BCNSP- 2017)
• Certified Applied clinical pharmacist at Ulster university- Coleraine-UK,2018
• Certified clinical nutritionist At Antrim hospital – north Ireland-uk, 2018
• Certified health coach- IIN- USA, 2021
• Diploma in pediatric clinical nutrition - NRS- Egypt 2020
• Senior transplant clinical pharmacist at Ain Shams Center for Organ
Transplantation (ASCOT)-2008
Agenda

• Understand ageing
• Multi-morbid conditions
• Daily functioning
• Geriatric assessment
• Geriatrics is the branch of medicine that focuses on health
promotion, prevention, and diagnosis and treatment of disease
and disability in older adults.
• Geriatrics offers a wide diversity of career options and is a
clinically and intellectually rewarding discipline given the
medical complexity of older adults.
• Geriatricians reap the rewards of making a difference in a
patient’s level of independence, well-being and quality of life.
Birth of geriatric medicine
• In 1909, Austrian born physician, IgnatzLeo Naschercoined the
term “geriatrics” for care of the elderly, explaining, “Geriatrics,
from geras, old age, and iatrikos, relating to the physician, is a
term I would suggest as an addition to our vocabulary, to cover
the same field in old age that is covered by the term pediatrics
in childhood, to emphasize the necessity of considering senility
and its disease apart from maturity and to assign it a separate
place in medicine.”
• •Until Nascher’s time, older adults were not treated differently
or in different ways than other adult patients.
• Social forces came into play in the period during WWI and
WWII that both necessitated and facilitated long-term care for
the elderly: The number of elderly people began to increase
due to improvements in economic conditions and medicine.
Aim of geriatricians
• Focus on maintaining patient well-being and independent
functioning
• Diagnose and treat conditions that commonly occur with age
• Monitor side effects of prescribed medicine and drug
interaction due to patients often requiring multiple
medications.
• Balance pros and cons of certain treatments within the
context of the age of the patient
Why do we age?
 Ageing is a progressive and generalized impairement of body
functions resulting in, loss of adaptive responses to stress
and increasing the risk of age- related disease
 People more than 60 years are considered elderly
 Old age is not a disease but normal and inevitable biological
phenomenon
Theories of ageing
• Genetic theories:
– Somatic mutation of genes
– Genetically determined life span
– Cross linkage/ loss of important cellular components and DNA
• Random damage theories:
– Accumlation of toxic metabolites and free oxygen radicles
– Reduced physiologiccal capacity and wear-n-tear of cells of vital
organs
– Non-enzymatic glycosylation of proteins
Geriatric assessment
 multidimensional, multidisciplinary assessment designed to evaluate an
older person's functional ability, physical health, cognition and mental
health, and socioenvironmental circumstances. It is usually initiated
when the physician identifies a potential problem.
 Specific elements of physical health that are evaluated include nutrition,
vision, hearing, fecal and urinary continence, and balance.
 A complete assessment is usually initiated when the physician detects a
potential problem such as confusion, falls, immobility, or incontinence.
However, older persons often do not present in a typical manner, and
atypical responses to illness are common. A patient presenting with
confusion may not have a neurologic problem, but rather an infection.
Social and psychological factors may also mask classic disease
presentations. For example, although 30 percent of adults older than 85
years have dementia,
 A complete assessment is usually initiated when the physician
detects a potential problem such as confusion, falls, immobility, or
incontinence. However, older persons often do not present in a
typical manner, and atypical responses to illness are common. A
patient presenting with confusion may not have a neurologic
problem, but rather an infection. Social and psychological factors
may also mask classic disease presentations. For example, although
30 percent of adults older than 85 years have dementia.
 The geriatric assessment differs from a typical medical evaluation by
including nonmedical domains; by emphasizing functional capacity
and quality of life; and, often, by incorporating a multidisciplinary
team including a physician, nutritionist, social worker, and physical
and occupational therapists. This type of assessment often yields a
more complete and relevant list of medical problems, functional
problems, and psychosocial issues.
Functional Ability

 The geriatric assessment begins with a review of the two key divisions
of functional ability:
 activities of daily living (ADL)
 ADL are self-care activities that a person performs daily (e.g., eating, dressing,
bathing, transferring between the bed and a chair, using the toilet, controlling
bladder and bowel functions).
 instrumental activities of daily living (IADL).
 IADL are activities that are needed to live independently (e.g., doing housework,
preparing meals, taking medications properly, managing finances, using a
telephone).
 Physicians can acquire useful functional information by simply observing
older patients as they complete simple tasks, such as unbuttoning and
buttoning a shirt, picking up a pen and writing a sentence, taking off and
putting on shoes, and climbing up and down from an examination table.
Two instruments for assessing ADL and IADL include the Katz ADL scale
Physical Health

 The geriatric assessment incorporates all facets of a conventional


medical history, including main problem, current illness, past and current
medical problems, family and social history, demographic data, and a
review of systems.
 The approach to the history and physical examination, however, should
be specific to older persons.
 In particular, topics such as nutrition, vision, hearing, fecal and urinary
continence, balance and fall prevention, osteoporosis, and polypharmacy
should be included in the evaluation.
SCREENING FOR DISEASE
 n the normal aging process, there is often a decline in physiologic function
that is usually not disease-related.
 However, treatment of diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and glaucoma can
prevent significant future morbidity.
 Screening for malignancies may allow for early detection, and some are
curable if treated early.
 It is important that physicians weigh the potential harms of screening
before screening older patients.
 It is essential to consider family preferences regarding treatment if a
disease is detected, and the patient's functional status, comorbid
conditions, and predicted life expectancy.

NUTRITION

 A nutritional assessment is important because inadequate micronutrient


intake is common in older persons.
 Several age-related medical conditions may predispose patients to
vitamin and mineral deficiencies.
 Studies have shown that vitamins A, C, D, and B12; calcium; iron; zinc;
and other trace minerals are often deficient in the older population, even
in the absence of conditions such as pernicious anemia or
malabsorption.
 There are four components specific to the geriatric nutritional
assessment:
 (1) nutritional history performed with a nutritional health checklist;
 (2) a record of a patient's usual food intake based on 24-hour dietary recall;
 (3) physical examination with particular attention to signs associated with
inadequate nutrition or overconsumption;
 (4) select laboratory tests, if applicable.
VISION

 The most common causes of vision impairment in older persons include


presbyopia, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy, cataracts, and age-related
macular degeneration.
 The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) found insufficient
evidence to recommend for or against screening with ophthalmoscopy in
asymptomatic older patients.
 In 1995, the Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination
advised primary care physicians to use a Snellen chart to screen for
visual acuity, and recommended that older patients who have had
diabetes for at least five years have an assessment by an
ophthalmologist.
 Additionally, the task force advised that patients at high risk of glaucoma,
including black persons and those with a positive family history, diabetes,
or severe myopia, undergo periodic assessment by an ophthalmologist.
HEARING
 Pre-sbycusis is the third most common chronic condition in elderly, after
hypertension and arthritis.
 Audioscope examination, otoscopic examination, and the whispered
voice test are also recommended.
 The whispered voice test is performed by standing approximately 3 ft
behind the patient and whispering a series of letters and numbers after
exhaling to assure a quiet whisper.
 Failure to repeat most of the letters and numbers indicates hearing
impairment.
URINARY CONTINENCE
 Urinary incontinence, the unintentional leakage of urine, affects
approximately 15 million persons in the United States, most of whom are
older.
 Urinary incontinence has important medical repercussions and is
associated with decubitus ulcers, sepsis, renal failure, urinary tract
infections, and increased mortality.
 Psychosocial implications of incontinence include loss of self-esteem,
restriction of social and sexual activities, and depression.
 Additionally, incontinence is often a key deciding factor for nursing home
placement.
 An assessment for urinary incontinence should include the evaluation of
fluid intake, medications, cognitive function, mobility, and previous urologic
surgeries.
 The single best question to ask when diagnosing urge incontinence is, “Do
you have a strong and sudden urge to void that makes you leak before
reaching the toilet?” (positive likelihood ratio = 4.2; negative likelihood ratio
= 0.48). A good question to ask when diagnosing stress incontinence is, “Is
your incontinence caused by coughing, sneezing, lifting, walking, or
running?” (positive likelihood ratio = 2.2; negative likelihood ratio = 0.39)
BALANCE AND FALL PREVENTION
 Impaired balance in older persons often manifests as falls and fall-
related injuries. Approximately one-third of community-living older
persons fall at least once per year, with many falling multiple times.
 Falls are the leading cause of hospitalization and injury-related death in
persons 75 years and older.
 The Tinetti Balance and Gait Evaluation is a useful tool to assess a
patient's fall risk.
 This test involves observing as a patient gets up from a chair without
using his or her arms, walks 10 ft, turns around, walks back, and
returns to a seated position. This entire process should take less than
16 seconds. Those patients who have difficulty performing this test
have an increased risk of falling and need further evaluation.
 Older persons can decrease their fall risk with exercise, physical
therapy, a home hazard assessment, and withdrawal of psychotropic
medications. Guidelines addressing fall prevention in older persons
living in nursing homes have been published by the American Medical
Directors Association and the American Geriatrics Society
OSTEOPOROSIS

 Osteoporosis may result in low-impact or spontaneous fragility fractures,


which can lead to a fall.
 Osteoporosis can be diagnosed clinically or radiographically.
 It is most commonly diagnosed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry of
the total hip, femoral neck, or lumbar spine, with a T-score of –2.5 or
below.
 The USPSTF has advised routinely screening women 65 years and older
for osteoporosis with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry of the femoral
neck.
POLYPHARMACY
 Polypharmacy, which is the use of multiple medications or the
administration of more medications than clinically indicated, is common
in older persons.
 Among older adults, 30 percent of hospital admissions and many
preventable problems, such as falls and confusion, are believed to be
related to adverse drug effects.
 The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services encourages the use of
the Beers criteria, which list medication and medication classes that
should be avoided in older persons, as part of an older patient's
medication assessment to reduce adverse effects
 The Beers criteria can be found
at http://www.dcri.duke.edu/ccge/curtis/beers.html.
Cognition and Mental Health

 DEPRESSION
 The USPSTF recommends screening adults for depression if systems of care are in place.
 Of the several validated screening instruments for depression, the Geriatric Depression Scale
and the Hamilton Depression Scale are the easiest to use and most widely accepted.
 However, a simple two-question screening tool (“During the past month, have you been
bothered by feelings of sadness, depression, or hopelessness?” and “Have you often been
bothered by a lack of interest or pleasure in doing things?”) is as effective as these longer
scales.
 Responding in the affirmative to one or both of these questions is a positive screening test for
depression that requires further evaluation.

 DEMENTIA
 Early diagnosis of dementia allows patients timely access to medications and helps families to
make preparations for the future.
 It can also help in the management of other symptoms that often accompany the early stages
of dementia, such as depression and irritability.
 There are several screening tests available to assess cognitive dysfunction; however, the Mini-
Cognitive Assessment Instrument is the preferred test for the family physician because of its
speed, convenience, and accuracy, as well as the fact that it does not require fluency in English

Any questions??

You might also like