specialist geriatric assessment and medication review in hospital continuing care resulted in a reduction in medication use, but at a significant cost. No benefits in hard clinical outcomes were demonstrated. However, qualitative benefits and lower costs may become evident over longer periods.
Background: beat-to-beat technology is increasingly used for investigating orthostatic intolerance (OI) but the prevalence of orthostatic hypotension (OH) diagnosed with this technology is unclear. Objectives: (i) to use beat-to-beat technology to define the prevalence of OH, (ii) to investigate the pathological correlates of OH, (iii) to report the diversity of postural BP responses. Methods: cross-sectional study of adults ≥ 65 years. BP responses to a 3-min head-up tilt were analysed. Results: of 326 participants, 203(62.3%) were females. The median (IQR) age was 73 (70-78). One hundred and ninety-one (58.6%) met standard (20 mmHg systolic/10 mmHg diastolic) criteria for OH. The prevalence was higher in females (60.1% F versus 56.1% M); 47% were arteriolar subtype, 33% were venular, 9% were mixed and 11.0% could not be classified. Morphological analysis identified 102 subjects with 'small drop, overshoot', 131 with 'medium drop, slow recovery' and 31 with 'large drop, nonrecovery'. Those with OH had a lower BMI (P = 0.02), a higher resting heart rate (P = 0.005), were more likely to take a psychotropic (P = 0.02), have vertigo (P = 0.004) and report OI (P = 0.02). The 95th centile for the duration of systolic BP (SYSBP) decay >20 mmHg was 175 s and the slope of systolic BP decay was 4.75 mmHg/s. The 5th centile for percentage recovery of SYSBP was 81.4%. Conclusion: (i) beat-to-beat methods identify a higher prevalence of OH than sphygmomanometry, (ii) the pathological correlates of OH diagnosed in this manner are similar to those described for sphygmomanometry, (iii) there is a diverse pattern of orthostatic BP decay that could be used in future research to predict adverse outcomes in OH.
There is increasing recognition that aging can have a profound effect on the presentation of illness. Older patients with diseases of visceral organs are much more likely than younger adults to present atypically. Examples are the frequent absence of pain in older patients with conditions such as myocardial infarction, peptic ulcer disease, and pneumothorax. Recent developments have helped elucidate the complex processes involved in signaling information from the effects of noxious stimuli on visceral organs, but understanding of why older patients with visceral disease are more likely to present without pain is still rudimentary. Much of the previous experimental evidence on age-related differences relates to somatic rather than visceral sources of pain. As a result, it may not have direct comparability with transmission of information on visceral damage or noxious stimulation. This article reviews the published pathophysiological data on sensory transmission from visceral organs. Where possible, this is correlated with other published clinical studies on age-related differences in visceral pain perception. Areas in which experimental evidence is absent are also highlighted. Finally suggestions are made as to how newer experimental and neuroimaging techniques may help to increase understanding of this complex subject and its resulting clinical applicability.
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