The impact of postoperative cognitive training on health‐related quality of life and cognitive failures in daily living after heart valve surgery: A randomized clinical trial

Author:

Butz Marius12ORCID,Gerriets Tibo12,Sammer Gebhard134,El‐Shazly Jasmin5,Tschernatsch Marlene12,Schramm Patrick12ORCID,Doeppner Thorsten R.2,Braun Tobias12ORCID,Boening Andreas6,Mengden Thomas7,Choi Yeong‐Hoon8,Schoenburg Markus128,Juenemann Martin12

Affiliation:

1. Heart and Brain Research Group Kerckhoff Heart and Thorax Center Bad Nauheim Germany

2. Department of Neurology University Hospital Giessen and Marburg Giessen Germany

3. Cognitive Neuroscience at the Centre of Psychiatry University Giessen Giessen Germany

4. Department of Psychology Justus‐Liebig University Giessen Germany

5. Department of Psychocardiology Kerckhoff Heart and Thorax Center Bad Nauheim Germany

6. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery University Hospital Giessen and Marburg Giessen Germany

7. Department of Rehabilitation Kerckhoff Heart and Thorax Center Bad Nauheim Germany

8. Department of Cardiac Surgery Kerckhoff Heart and Thorax Center Bad Nauheim Germany

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundHeart surgery is a risk factor for objectively and subjectively assessable postoperative cognitive decline (POCD), which is relevant for everyday life. The aim of this study was to investigate whether early postoperative cognitive training has an impact on health‐related quality of life and cognitive failures in daily living after cardiac surgery.MethodsThe study was a two‐arm, randomized, controlled, outcome‐blinded trial involving older patients undergoing elective heart valve surgery with extracorporeal circulation (ECC). Recruitment took place at the Departments of Cardiac Surgery of the Kerckhoff Clinic in Bad Nauheim (Germany) and the University Hospital in Giessen (Germany). The patients were randomized (1:1 ratio) to either a paper‐and‐pencil–based cognitive training group or a control group. We applied the Short Form Health Survey (SF‐36) and the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire (CFQ) prior to surgery and 3 months after the cognitive training. Data were analyzed in a per‐protocol fashion.ResultsThree months after discharge from rehabilitation, the training group (n = 31) showed improvement in health‐related quality of life compared to the control group (n = 29), especially in role limitations due to emotional problems (U = −2.649, p = .008, η2 = 0.121), energy and fatigue (F[2.55] = 5.72, p = .020, η2 = 0.062), social functioning (U = −2.137, p = .033, η2 = 0.076), the average of all SF‐36 factors (U = −2.374, p = .018, η2 = 0.094), health change from the past year to the present time (U = −2.378, p = .017, η2 = 0.094), and the mental component summary (U = −2.470, p = .013, η2 = 0.102).ConclusionAs our cognitive training has shown beneficial effects, this intervention could be a promising method to enhance health‐related quality of life after cardiac surgery.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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