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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2004;25:406-408
© 2004 Elsevier Science NL


Editorial comment

Post-operative neuropsychological function unaffected by SjO2 monitoring in DHCA

Teruhisa Kazui*

First Department of Surgery, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, 1-20-1 Handayama, 431-3192 Hamamatsu, Japan

* Tel.: +81-53-435-2276; fax: +81-53-435-2272
e-mail: tkazui{at}hama-med.ac.jp

Three cerebral protection methods are currently being used in thoracic aortic repair: deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA) with or without retrograde cerebral perfusion (RCP) and antegrade selective cerebral perfusion (SCP).

Dr Griepp, of Mt Sinai Hospital, having popularized this method of protecting the brain during aortic arch repair [1], is recognized as the father of DHCA, while Mt Sinai group as a whole is credited with numerous scientific papers regarding the neuroprotective effect of DHCA. However, appropriate criteria for initiating DHCA have not been established so far and tend to vary depending on the hospital. These have included electrical silence of the electroencephalogram, SjO2 monitoring or merely measurements of temperature at different sites (rectal, bladder, esophageal, nasopharyngeal, and tympanic). At Mt Sinai, SjO2 monitoring has been used as a marker of initiating DHCA because of the assumption that highly saturated jugular venous blood reflected global cerebral cooling as well as the concomitant cerebral metabolic suppression before the initiation of DHCA. In this issue of the journal, Reich and associates [2] from the Department of Anesthesiology at Mt Sinai Hospital, report on the implications of applying SjO2 monitoring as the criterion for initialing DHCA during thoracic aortic surgery. Thoracic aortic surgical patients who had undergone both pre- and post-operative neuropsychological testing were divided into three groups: (1) those with SjO2>=95% at DHCA onset, (2) those with SjO2<95% at DHCA onset, and (3) those without SjO2 monitoring. No statistically significant differences were noted in the incidence of post-operative neuropsychological dysfunctions among the three groups of patients. Use of SjO2 monitoring was associated with more profound hypothermia prior to DHCA due to more prolonged cooling in an attempt to bring the SjO2 above the 95% threshold. Although there are limitations for the current study including the high attrition rate, small sample size of the study, and the difference in mean cooling duration among the three groups, the study provides us with some valuable information. According to the study, SjO2 monitoring does not increase neuroprotection in patients undergoing DHCA for thoracic aortic repair. The discrepancy between jugular bulb oxygenation saturation before the initiation of DHCA and the post-operative neuropsychological function, considered to be a sensitive measure of brain function, could be explained in several ways.

First, although the main mechanism of cerebral protection in DHCA has been suggested to be cerebral metabolic suppression, other hypothermia-induced mechanisms—reductions in ATP depletion, release of toxic neurotransmitters, generation of free radicals and reperfusion injury—may play a considerable role in protecting the brain from ischemic injuries. In addition to this, another factor, i.e. gaseous and particulate embolization during reperfusion, may also play a significant role in the incidence of neuropsychological dysfunction.

Secondly, even if the core temperature is brought down to 13 °C, the cerebral oxygen consumption still remains at 20% of the baseline (37 °C) [3]. Therefore, a limit to the circulatory arrest time must essentially exist. McCullough and colleagues [4] have reported that a safe DHCA duration at 15 °C, based on the calculated cerebral metabolic rate, was 29 min. Moreover, Reich and coworkers [5] have previously reported that a DHCA of 25 min or more and an advanced age were associated with memory and fine motor deficits. In this series by Reich et al. although the mean cerebral ischemic time ranged from 0.30 to 0.37 h, which seemed to be within the ‘safe’ duration margin in terms of cerebral protection, their longest cerebral ischemic time ranged from 1.00 to 1.83 h in each group. It is widely recognized that the temperature during DHCA and the duration of circulatory arrest are important determinants of the adequacy of cerebral protection. It is therefore only to be expected that patients undergoing DHCA of 25 min or more have developed neuropsychological dysfunction regardless of SjO2 monitoring. I am curious whether the difference would have been noted among the three groups if DHCA patients had been compared according to the duration of circulatory arrest in each group.

Thirdly, due to some theoretical limitations, SjO2 monitoring could be applied as a global cerebral hypothermia, but not as cerebral metabolic suppression, as mentioned in the discussion.

Lastly, the authors refer to jugular venous desaturation during the rewarming phase of CPB. Since we have occasionally experienced the same phenomenon with a moderate hypothermic antegrade selective cerebral perfusion [6], it would be a good idea to investigate the effect of desaturation during the rewarming period on the post-operative neurocognitive dysfunction.

It is apparent from this study that patients undergoing DHCA within a ‘safe’ circulatory arrest duration had developed some neuropsychological dysfunction which seemed to be related to improper cerebral protection. Clearly, we must seek a safer alternative to DHCA. The question is whether another adjunctive cerebral protective technique will increase the neuroprotective effect evaluated by neuropsychological testing. Harrington and colleagues [7] reported that RCP with DHCA did not improve neuropsychometric outcome; similarly, Reich and associates [8] indicated that RCP had no beneficial effect (and most likely a negative one) upon cognitive outcome. We are looking forward to further investigation into whether SCP, which has been used routinely for complex and time-consuming aortic arch repair at our institute [9], improves post-operative neuropsychological outcome, as it supplies sufficiently oxygenated blood to the brain resulting in better cerebral metabolism.

Finally, I would like to congratulate Mt Sinai group on this excellent work which will definitely contribute to the field of aortic surgery.


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 References
 

  1. Griepp R.B., Stinson E.B., Hollingsworth J.F., Buehler D. Prosthetic replacement of the aortic arch. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1975;70:1051-1063.[Abstract]
  2. Reich DL, Horn LM, Hossain S, Uysal S. Using jugular bulb oxyhemoglobin saturation to guide onset of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest does not affect postoperative neuropsychological function. Eur J Cardiothoracic Surg; in press, this issue.
  3. Mezrow C.K., Midulla P.S., Sadeghi A.M., Gandsas A., Wang W., Dapunt O.E., Zappulla R., Griepp R.B. Evaluation of cerebral metabolism and quantitative electroencephalography after hypothermic circulatory arrest and low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass at different temperatures. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1994;107:1006-1019.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  4. McCullough J.N., Zhang N., Reich D.L., Juvonen T.S., Klein J.J., Spielvogel D., Arisan Ergin M., Griepp R.B. Cerebral metabolic suppression during hypothermic circulatory arrest in humans. Ann Thorac Surg 1999;67:1895-1899.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Reich D.L., Uysal S., Sliwinski M., Arisan Ergin M., Kahn R.A., Konstadt S.N., McCullough J., Hibbard M.R., Gordon W.A., Griepp R.B. Neuropsychologic outcome after deep hypothermic circulatory arrest in adults. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1999;117:156-163.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Yamashita K., Kazui T., Terada H., Washiyama N., Suzuki K., Bashar A.H.M. Cerebral oxygenation monitoring for total arch replacement using selective cerebral perfusion. Ann Thorac Surg 2001;72:503-508.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Harrington D.K., Bonser M., Moss A., Heafield M.T.E., Riddoch M.J., Bonser R.S. Neuropsychometric outcome following aortic arch surgery: a prospective randomized trial of retrograde cerebral perfusion. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2003;126:638-644.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  8. Reich D.L., Uysal S., Ergin M.A., Bodian C.A., Hossain S., Griepp R.B. Retrograde cerebral perfusion during thoracic aortic surgery and late neuropsychological dysfunction. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2001;19:594-600.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  9. Kazui T., Washiyama N., Muhammad B.A., Terada H., Yamashita K., Takinami M. Improved results of atherosclerotic arch aneurysm operations with a refined technique. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2001;121:491-499.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Related Article

Using jugular bulb oxyhemoglobin saturation to guide onset of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest does not affect post-operative neuropsychological function
David L. Reich, Loren M. Horn, Sabera Hossain, and Suzan Uysal
Eur. J. Cardiothorac. Surg. 2004 25: 401-406. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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