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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 109, Issue 5 925-934, Copyright © 1995 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
NOTE: The fulltext of this article is not available online.
C. K. Mezrow, P. S. Midulla, A. M. Sadeghi, A. Gandsas, W. Wang, C. Bodian, H. H. Shing, R. Zappulla, O. E. Dapunt and R. B. Griepp
Although hypothermic circulatory arrest and low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass
are routinely used for surgical correction of congenital cardiac anomalies,
use of long durations of arrest, often required for more complex repairs,
raises serious concerns about cerebral safety. Searching for an
intraoperative assessment that can reliably predict cerebral injury, we
have found an excellent correlation between changes in quantitative
electroencephalography intraoperatively and immediately postoperatively
after prolonged hypothermic arrest, and neurologic and behavioral evidence
of cerebral injury. After epidural placement of four recording
electroencephalographic electrodes and baseline neurologic/behavioral and
electroencephalographic assessment, 32 puppies were randomly assigned to
one of four groups: hypothermic controls in which cooling to 18 degrees C
was followed immediately by rewarming, 30 minutes of hypothermic
circulatory arrest at 18 degrees C, 90 minutes of arrest at 18 degrees C,
and 90 minutes of low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass at 25 ml/kg per minute at
18 degrees C. An electroencephalogram was recorded at baseline, after
cooling, during rewarming, and at 2, 4, and 8 hours after the start of
rewarming, as well as before the operation and 1 week after the operation.
Postoperative neurologic and behavioral outcome was assessed 24 hours after
cardiopulmonary bypass and daily for 1 week by means of a graded scale in
which 0 is normal and 12 and 13 indicate severe neurologic injury (coma and
death). Thirty animals survived the experimental protocol: two animals in
the 90-minute hypothermic arrest group died before neurologic evaluation
could be completed, and the remainder exhibited various degrees of
neurologic and behavioral impairment, more severe on day 1 than on day 6.
No animal in the remaining groups had a significant neurologic deficit.
Quantitative electroencephalographic analysis shows marked differences
between the 90-minute arrest group and the controls in the percent
electroencephalographic silence during rewarming and at 2 hours, and in the
percent recovery of baseline power at 2, 4, and 8 hours. At 2 hours after
the start of rewarming, a correlation between electroencephalographic
amplitude and neurologic/behavioral score on day 1 was carried out, which
predicts with great certainty (p < 0.00001) that if
electroencephalographic power at this time is less than 500 microV2, overt
neurologic injury will subsequently become apparent. In addition, a
significant shift from higher to lower frequency in the day 6 postoperative
electroencephalogram compared with baseline occurs only in the 90-minute
arrest group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Quantitative electroencephalography: a method to assess cerebral injury after hypothermic circulatory arrest
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Neurosurgery, and Biomathematical Sciences, Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY 10029, USA.
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