Orthopedics · Anesthesiology · Neurology

Hip Fracture With Subdural Bleeding in an Elderly Patient: How a Multidisciplinary Team Made Surgery Possible

Published: June 14, 2026  |  Amcare Medical · Beijing
Quick Summary Henry, an elderly patient in his 80s, suffered both a hip fracture and a small traumatic subdural hematoma after a fall. A local hospital declined anesthesia and surgery because of the high perioperative risk. After transfer, anesthesiology and neurology specialists reassessed the case, controlled the risk, provided preemptive analgesia with a long-acting fascia iliaca block, and enabled hip replacement under spinal anesthesia.
Elderly hip fracture with small subdural hematoma
01

One Fall, Two Serious Problems

Henry was in his 80s. After an accidental fall, local hospital examinations found two problems: a hip fracture and a small traumatic subdural hematoma.

The local anesthesiology team considered the anesthesia risk too high. Because of advanced age, perioperative cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risks were already significant. The small intracranial hematoma made the situation even more concerning, as blood pressure fluctuations during anesthesia and surgery could theoretically worsen bleeding.

Two anesthesia evaluations did not approve surgery. The family was advised to wait until the hematoma stabilized or disappeared.

Hip fracture + small subdural hematoma → surgery delayed by risk concerns

Advanced age · High anesthesia risk · Local hospital declined surgery · Family worried about missing the golden window

02

The Turning Point — Reassessment by Anesthesiology and Neurology

The family contacted Dr. Xu from Anesthesiology at another hospital. After carefully reviewing the imaging, Dr. Xu noted that the subdural hematoma was small, localized, and stable. Henry had no signs of intracranial hypertension and no symptoms of nerve compression.

Dr. Xu then requested a neurology consultation. Dr. Wang from Neurology confirmed that with strict blood pressure control and avoidance of anticoagulation, the risk of hematoma worsening was controllable.

"Advanced age and high risk are not reasons to give up. The key is whether we can create safe conditions for surgery."
— Dr. Xu

The hospital opened a green channel and admitted Henry for surgery preparation.

03

The Key Step — Preemptive Analgesia With a 72-Hour Block

After admission, Dr. Sun from Anesthesiology immediately performed an ultrasound-guided fascia iliaca nerve block at the bedside using an ultra-long-acting local anesthetic that could provide analgesia for up to 72 hours.

Without Pain Control
  • Severe hip fracture pain
  • Difficulty turning over
  • Longer bed rest
  • Higher risk of pneumonia, pressure sores, and thrombosis
  • Pain-induced blood pressure spikes
✦ After Fascia Iliaca Block
  • Pain was greatly reduced
  • Henry could turn over and cooperate with checks
  • Supported intraoperative anesthesia
  • Provided post-operative analgesia
  • Helped reduce risk from pain-related blood pressure changes

Dr. Sun described the block as achieving three goals at once: preoperative analgesia, intraoperative anesthesia support, and postoperative pain control.

04

From “Cannot Operate” to Successful Hip Replacement

Recovery after hip replacement in elderly high-risk patient

Because of the preemptive analgesia, Henry could comfortably lie in the side position. Dr. Lu from Anesthesiology successfully performed spinal anesthesia, avoiding tracheal intubation and reducing cardiopulmonary burden compared with general anesthesia.

Dr. Wu from Orthopedics quickly arrived and completed hip replacement surgery. The procedure went smoothly, and Henry returned to the ward awake.

Before Transfer

Local hospital considered anesthesia risk too high because of age and intracranial bleeding.

After Reassessment

Anesthesiology and neurology confirmed that risk could be controlled under strict conditions.

After Surgery

Preemptive analgesia and spinal anesthesia enabled successful hip replacement.

"From being turned away to successfully leaving the operating room, what changed the outcome was a multidisciplinary anesthesia team willing to create safe conditions."

Henry's story reminds families that hip fracture in older adults is an urgent condition. For high-risk elderly patients, multidisciplinary evaluation, preemptive analgesia, precise anesthesia, and experienced orthopedic care can help protect the surgical window and improve the chance of recovery.

Excellent Medical Team

Meet Your Doctors

Treated by
Dr. Xu Anesthesiology Specialist
Dr. Wang Neurology Specialist
Dr. Sun Anesthesiology Specialist
Dr. Lu Anesthesiology Specialist
Dr. Wu Orthopedic Specialist
Disclaimer: The information on this page is for reference only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual results may vary. If you have similar symptoms or medical needs, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.