DOAJ Open Access 2019

Cerebrovascular Disease and Perioperative Neurologic Vulnerability: A Prospective Cohort Study

Phillip E. Vlisides Phillip E. Vlisides Bryan Kunkler Aleda Thompson Mackenzie Zierau +8 lainnya

Abstrak

Background: Stroke is a devastating perioperative complication without effective methods for prevention or diagnosis. The objective of this study was to analyze evidence-based strategies for detecting cerebrovascular vulnerability and injury in a high-risk cohort of non-cardiac surgery patients.Methods: This was a single-center, prospective cohort study. Fifty patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery were recruited −25 with known cerebrovascular disease and 25 matched controls. Neurologic vulnerability was measured with intraoperative cerebral oximetry as the primary outcome. Perioperative neurocognitive testing and serum biomarker analysis (S-100β, neuron specific enolase, glial fibrillary acid protein, and matrix metalloproteinase-9) were measured as secondary outcomes.Results: Cerebral desaturation events (an oximetry decrease ≥20% from baseline or <50% absolute value for ≥3 min) occurred in 7/24 (29%) cerebrovascular disease patients and 2/24 (8.3%) controls (relative risk 3.5, 95% CI 0.81–15.2; P = 0.094). Cognitive function trends were similar in both groups, though overall scores (range: 1,500–7,197) were ~1 standard deviation lower in cerebrovascular patients across the entire perioperative period (−1,049 [95% CI −1,662, −436], P < 0.001). No significant serum biomarker differences were found between groups over time. One control patient experienced intraoperative hypoxic-ischemic injury, but no robust biomarker or oximetry changes were observed.Conclusions: Cerebrovascular disease patients did not demonstrate dramatic differences in cerebral oximetry, cognitive trajectory, or molecular biomarkers compared to controls. Moreover, a catastrophic hypoxic-ischemic event was neither predicted nor detected by any strategy tested. These findings support the need for novel research into cerebrovascular risk and vulnerability.

Penulis (13)

P

Phillip E. Vlisides

P

Phillip E. Vlisides

B

Bryan Kunkler

A

Aleda Thompson

M

Mackenzie Zierau

R

Remy Lobo

M

Mary O. Strasser

M

Michael J. Cantley

A

Amy McKinney

A

Allen D. Everett

G

George A. Mashour

G

George A. Mashour

P

Paul Picton

Format Sitasi

Vlisides, P.E., Vlisides, P.E., Kunkler, B., Thompson, A., Zierau, M., Lobo, R. et al. (2019). Cerebrovascular Disease and Perioperative Neurologic Vulnerability: A Prospective Cohort Study. https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00560

Akses Cepat

PDF tidak tersedia langsung

Cek di sumber asli →
Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00560
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2019
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.3389/fneur.2019.00560
Akses
Open Access ✓