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Management of hip fracture in older adults with cognitive impairment: a narrative review

Hao Rao et al · Frontiers Media S.A · 2026

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BackgroundHip fractures in older adults are costly and often fatal. Cognitive impairment (CI) complicates pain assessment, raises delirium risk, and hinders early mobilization and rehabilitation. This review synthesizes recent evidence on postoperative care, covering epidemiology, mechanisms, delirium, rehab, outcomes, and practical bedside strategies.MethodsA narrative review was performed to inform postoperative management of older adults hip-fracture patients with CI. PubMed and Web of Science were searched from 2018 to 2025 using MeSH and free-text terms for hip fracture, cognitive dysfunction/dementia/MCI, and rehabilitation, delirium, perioperative care, orthogeriatrics, and outcomes. Only English-language human studies were included. CI was defined by DSM-5/ICD-10 dementia, Petersen MCI, or MMSE <24/MoCA <26. Two reviewers independently screened studies; disagreements were resolved by a senior researcher. Case reports, protocols, abstracts, animal studies, <50 participants, non-core topics, and short follow-up were excluded. Additional 2023–2025 studies were identified by targeted searches and reference tracing. No risk-of-bias or GRADE assessment was applied.ResultsAmong older adults with hip fracture, approximately 20–40% have CI, making it a prominent clinical characteristic of this population. Dementia and even mild cognitive deficits increase the risk of falls and hip fractures by two- to threefold. After fracture, CI is linked to worse outcomes, including more delirium and complications, slower recovery, and higher mortality. Delirium is among the most prominent postoperative complications, particularly in those with pre-existing CI. Multidisciplinary care models, such as orthogeriatric co-management, early surgery within 24 to 48 h, adequate analgesia, and proactive delirium prevention, are associated with better outcomes. Rehabilitation should not be considered futile in dementia, yet patients with CI often receive less therapy and are less likely to regain pre-fracture function. One-year mortality and institutionalization are higher, while education and cognitive reserve may buffer decline, highlighting CI heterogeneity.ConclusionHip fracture in older adults with CI represents a high-risk clinical scenario that often warrants coordinated interdisciplinary care. Current clinical recommendations are supported by a hierarchy of evidence ranging from Level I (meta-analyses and RCTs) for orthogeriatric co-management and analgesia to Level II (prospective cohorts) for long-term functional outcomes. Available evidence generally supports early surgery, geriatric co-management, delirium prevention, effective analgesia, early mobilization, and tailored rehabilitation. These strategies may support recovery and may be associated with lower mortality and less loss of independence, though gaps remain in optimal rehab intensity and long-term cognitive outcomes.

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APA 7

al, H. R. E. (2026). Management of hip fracture in older adults with cognitive impairment: a narrative review. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2026.1816268

MLA

al, Hao Rao et. "Management of hip fracture in older adults with cognitive impairment: a narrative review." 2026. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2026.1816268.

Chicago

al, Hao Rao et. 2026. "Management of hip fracture in older adults with cognitive impairment: a narrative review.". https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2026.1816268.

Harvard

al, H. R. E. 2026, Management of hip fracture in older adults with cognitive impairment: a narrative review, Frontiers Media S.A, available at: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2026.1816268 [Accessed 28 Jun. 2026].

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Título
Management of hip fracture in older adults with cognitive impairment: a narrative review
Autor / colaboradores
Hao Rao et al
Editorial
Frontiers Media S.A
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
2296-2565
ISSN
2296-2565
Idioma
eng

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