Abstract

Elderly adults are more likely to develop delirium after major surgery, but there is limited knowledge of the vulnerability for postoperative delirium. In this study, we aimed to identify neural predisposing factors for postoperative delirium and develop a prediction model for estimating an individual’s probability of postoperative delirium. Among 57 elderly participants with femoral neck fracture, 25 patients developed postoperative delirium and 32 patients did not. We preoperatively obtained data for clinical assessments, anatomical MRI, and resting-state functional MRI. Then we evaluated gray matter (GM) density, fractional anisotropy, and the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF), and conducted a group-level inference. The prediction models were developed to estimate an individual’s probability using logistic regression. The group-level analysis revealed that neuroticism score, ALFF in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and GM density in the caudate/suprachiasmatic nucleus were predisposing factors. The prediction model with these factors showed a correct classification rate of 86% using a leave-one-out cross-validation. The predicted probability computed from the logistic model was significantly correlated with delirium severity. These results suggest that the three components are the most important predisposing factors for postoperative delirium, and our prediction model may reflect the core pathophysiology in estimating the probability of postoperative delirium.

Highlights

  • Delirium is an acute neuropsychiatric syndrome that is characterized by sudden alterations and fluctuations in consciousness and cognition

  • We found that gray matter (GM) density in the caudate/suprachiasmatic nucleus, amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), and neuroticism scores were the predisposing factors contributing to postoperative delirium

  • Considering that both structural and functional information are involved in the prediction of postoperative delirium, individual differences in structural atrophy and functional abnormalities may be important in predicting individual variations in the severity of delirium

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Summary

Introduction

Delirium is an acute neuropsychiatric syndrome that is characterized by sudden alterations and fluctuations in consciousness and cognition. Some prospective cohort studies have shown the predictive model of delirium in hospitalized elderly patients using 4 risk factors such as vision impairment, severity illness, cognitive impairment, and blood urea nitrogen/creatinine ratio[14]. Despite various suggestions, these previous models have not included neurobiological evidence. Preliminary to the present study, we recently identified psychological risk factors of postoperative delirium including neuroticism[5] According to this perspective, we only considered the cognitive and personality characteristics identified by our preliminary study rather than re-assessing all possible clinical features, and instead focused on identifying neural predisposing factors from structural and functional brain imaging data in the present study

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