Objective and subjective assessments of changes in cognition after carotid endarterectomy (CEA) were compared between older patients (AE76 years old) and younger patients (º76 years old). Patients underwent subjective cognitive assessment by a neurosurgeon and the patient's next of kin, and neuropsychological testing (five parameters) before and after surgery. Of 37 older patients studied, 4 (11%), 28 (75%), and 5 (14%) patients were defined as having subjectively improved, unchanged, and impaired cognition, respectively, following surgery. Differences in test scores (postoperative test score -preoperative test score: D score) in all neuropsychological tests were significantly lower in the older patients than in the 213 younger patients. The D score was able to statistically differentiate older patients with subjectively improved, unchanged, and impaired cognition after surgery. Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed that the D score cut-off point for detecting subjective improvement (upper cut-off point) and impairment (lower cut-off point) in cognition after surgery in older patients was identical to the mean or the mean +0.5 standard deviation (SD) and the mean -1.5 SD or the mean -1 SD, respectively, of the control value obtained from normal subjects. The upper and lower cut-off points were lower and higher, respectively, than those in younger patients. In conclusion, although neuropsychological test scores reflect the subjective assessment of postoperative change in cognition in older patients, the optimal cut-off points for the test scores to detect subjective improvement and impairment in cognition after CEA are different in older patients compared with younger patients.