P
P A Kristensen
Researcher at Copenhagen University Hospital
Publications - 4
Citations - 2613
P A Kristensen is an academic researcher from Copenhagen University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction & Abdominal surgery. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 2356 citations.
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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
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
Benzodiazepines and postoperative cognitive dysfunction in the elderly. ISPOCD Group. International Study of Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction.
TL;DR: The postoperative cognitive dysfunction found in elderly patients after operation could not be explained by benzodiazepine concentrations detected in blood, and only age was found to correlate with the composite z-score.
Journal ArticleDOI
Do blood concentrations of neurone specific enolase and S-100 beta protein reflect cognitive dysfunction after abdominal surgery?ISPOCD Group.
TL;DR: Blood concentrations of S-100 beta protein increase after abdominal surgery and may be related to postoperative delirium and no correlation was found between cognitive dysfunction and S- 100 beta protein or NSE concentration.