C
CD Hanning
Researcher at Leicester General Hospital
Publications - 19
Citations - 4455
CD Hanning is an academic researcher from Leicester General Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction & Fiber optic sensor. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 19 publications receiving 4081 citations. Previous affiliations of CD Hanning include Copenhagen University Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term postoperative cognitive dysfunction in the elderly: ISPOCD1 study
J. T. Moller,Pjm Pierre Cluitmans,Lars S. Rasmussen,Peter J. Houx,H Rasmussen,Jaume Canet,Patrick Rabbitt,Jellemer Jolles,K. Larsen,CD Hanning,Olivier Langeron,T Johnson,PM Lauven,P A Kristensen,A Biedler,H van Beem,O Fraidakis,Jeffrey H. Silverstein,Jew Jan Beneken,JS Gravenstein +19 more
TL;DR: The findings of this international multicentre study have implications for studies of the causes of cognitive decline and, in clinical practice, for the information given to patients before surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Does anaesthesia cause postoperative cognitive dysfunction? A randomised study of regional versus general anaesthesia in 438 elderly patients
Lars S. Rasmussen,T Johnson,HM Harrie Kuipers,D Kristensen,Volkert Siersma,P. Vila,Jellemer Jolles,A Papaioannou,H Abildstrom,Jeffrey H. Silverstein,JA Bonal,Johan Raeder,IK Nielsen,Kari Korttila,L Munoz,C Dodds,CD Hanning,J. T. Moller +17 more
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the incidence of POCD would be less with regional anaesthesia rather than general, and this work has shown this to be the case.
Journal ArticleDOI
The assessment of postoperative cognitive function.
TL;DR: A number of recommendations for the design and execution of studies within postoperative cognitive function are presented, and the critical reader may use these recommendations in the evaluation of the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive dysfunction 1-2 years after non-cardiac surgery in the elderly. ISPOCD group. International Study of Post-Operative Cognitive Dysfunction.
H Abildstrom,Lars S. Rasmussen,P. Rentowl,CD Hanning,H Rasmussen,P A Kristensen,J. T. Moller +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether postoperative cognitive dysfunction persists for 1-2 years after major non-cardiac surgery and found that 35 out of 336 patients (10.4%, CI: 7.2-13.7%) had cognitive dysfunction.
Journal ArticleDOI
Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction in Middle-aged Patients
T Johnson,Terri G. Monk,Lars S. Rasmussen,H Abildstrom,Peter Houx,Kari Korttila,HM Harrie Kuipers,CD Hanning,Volkert Siersma,Diana Kristensen,Jaume Canet,Maria Teresa Ibañaz,J. T. Moller +12 more
TL;DR: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction occurs frequently but resolves by 3 months after surgery, and may be associated with decreased activity during this period, as reported in subjective report overestimates the incidence.