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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 11, 650-656, Copyright © 1997 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
A Welz, O Pogarell, K Tatsch, J Schwarz, K Cryssagis and B Reichart
OBJECTIVE: Deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest has reduced primary
morbidity and mortality in thoracic aortic surgery. Although frank
neurological deficits have been proven to be a rare complication of this
technique, the rate of subtle but irreversible neuropsychological disorders
remains unknown. METHODS: A total of 23 patients (15 male, 8 female) who
had undergone surgery for dissection or aneurysm of the thoracic aorta
using deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest (mean 25.5 min, range 10-75
min) were studied retrospectively. The mean follow-up was 17 months. The
following psychometric tests were conducted: a computer-based test battery
to assess tonic alertness and sustained attention, the trail making test
(TMT part A and B), the Munchner Gedachtnistest and a verbal learning test.
In addition, a cerebral dopamine D2 receptor scintigraphy (using the SPECT
technique) was performed. For comparison, 10 healthy subjects were studied.
RESULTS: With regard to tonic alertness, 69.6 and 30.4% were below the 50th
and 10th centiles, respectively, according to age- and education-corrected
standard values. The impairment in sustained attention correlated
significantly with the duration of the circulatory arrest. On the tests
assessing short-term memory, the patients scored 30% below their age- and
education-corrected peers. In terms of long- term memory, 60.9 and 39.1% of
the patients were below one and two standard deviations, respectively.
Concerning speed of information processing whilst 78.3% of the patients
were below the 50th and 21.7% below the 10th centile. Indicative of some
persistent and functional brain alteration, the dopamine D2 receptor
binding was significantly reduced when compared with healthy subjects.
CONCLUSIONS: These data prove a substantial and chronic reduction of higher
cognitive function in some of the patients who underwent cardiac surgery
using deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest; this was accompanied by a
depression of the cerebral dopamine D2 receptor binding.
ARTICLES
Surgery of the thoracic aorta using deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest. Are there neurological consequences other than frank cerebral defects?
Department of Cardiac Surgery, Neurology, and Nuclear Medicine, University of Munich (Herzchirurgische Klinik der Ludwig-Maximilians- Universitat Munchen am Klinikum Grosshadern), Germany.
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