23 Geriatrics Flashcards
What are the ages included in the following Age categories:
- Young Old:
- Middle-Old
- Old-old
- Centenarian
- Super-centenarian
- Semi-supercentenarian
What are the ages included in the following Age categories:
- Young Old: 65-74
- Middle-Old: 75-84
- Old-old: 85+
- Centenarian: Someone who has lived to be 100
- Super-centenarian: Someone who has lived to 110
- Semi-supercentenarian: Someone aged 105-109
What is frailty?
Losing the ability to maintain homeostasis
- increased vulnerability from age-associated decline in reserve and fxn resulting in reduced ability to cope with everyday or acute stressors
What is the typical approach to care for older people?
- Economy of diagnosis
- “what is the patients DRP”
- Fragmentation of care
- Break up care by expertise/resource
- Disease management model
- Psychosocial factors often overlooked
What is geriatric syndrome?
4 key features?
A multifactorial condition that involves the interaction between identifiable situation-specific stressors and underlying age-related risk factors, resulting in damage across multiple organ systems
- 4 key features:
- Clinical and multifactorial conditions in older persons
- associated with poor health outcomes
- do not fit into disease categories (comorbidities)
- Require a multidimensional tx approach
What are the top 3 categories at risk for ADR (adverse drug reaction)?
- People with multiple chronic conditions
- Women (understudied)
- People over the age of 65 (understudied and taking many meds - polypharmacy)
What is polypharmacy?
- Literal definition:
- taking 2+ meds
- Most commonly accepted definition:
- 5+ meds (Rx or OTC)
- Proposed definitions:
- use of 2+ drugs w/o indications or for the same purpose
- use of a drug to treat the adverse rxns of another drug
- use of 2+ drugs from the same class to treat different indications
What is a polypharmacy Prescribing Cascade?
Use of one drug to treat the adverse effects of another drug
How does body composition change with aging?
- ↑ fat
- Loss of muscle mass
- may be due to inactivity vs physiological aging
- Fxn & quality of muscle changes
- neural stimulation slows
What are sensory changes associated with aging?
- taste
- loss of lingual papillae
- diminution of ability to taste
- ↓salivation
- use of dentures
- ↓interest in food
- ↓ taste of salt - may lead to ↑NaCl intake
- Hearing Loss
- Stria vascularis highly vascular tissue; greater O2 demand than the brain
- Vision (anticholinergic meds)
- Decreased ability to adapt to light
- reduced depth perception
- increased sensitivity to glare
Cardiac changes associated with aging?
- Stiffening of aorta - predisposition
- Decreased Cardiac output