| Literature DB >> 15601479 |
Henrik Jönsson1, Per Johnsson, Martin Bäckström, Christer Alling, Cecilia Dautovic-Bergh, Sten Blomquist.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The brain-derived protein S100B has been shown to be a useful marker of brain injury of different etiologies. Cognitive dysfunction after cardiac surgery using cardiopulmonary bypass has been reported to occur in up to 70% of patients. In this study we tried to evaluate S100B as a marker for cognitive dysfunction after coronary bypass surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass in a model where the inflow of S100B from shed mediastinal blood was corrected for.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15601479 PMCID: PMC544890 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-4-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 11a – Measured S100B release pattern in one patient and the calculated residual levels from the S100B from cardiotomy suction during surgery, a half-life of 25 minutes was used. 1b – Estimated true release, calculated by subtracting the residual levels (from 1a) from measured levels. 1c – Measured levels and estimated true release from one patient with high S100B at T0 and low estimated true release at T1. This patient also had a good neuropsychological outcome. 1d – Measured levels and estimated true release from one patient with low S100B at T0 and high estimated true release at T1. This patient had a bad neuropsychological outcome.
Demographics for the study group.
| Mean | St. dev. | |
| Number | 56 | |
| Sex (M/F) | 47/9 | |
| Age (years) | 60.4 | 9.0 |
| Education (years) | 9.6 | 3.1 |
| Perfusion time (Minutes) | 82.8 | 31.5 |
| X-clamp (minutes) | 53.9 | 23.5 |
Figure 2S100B release pattern after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass shown as a boxplot.
The relation between S100B levels and patient age tested in univariate linear regression analysis.
| r-value | p-level | |
| S100B at T0 | 0.19 | n. s |
| S100B at T1 | 0.30 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T2 | 0.30 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T3 | 0.34 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T4 | 0.37 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T5 | 0.32 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T6 | 0.37 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T8 | 0.38 | <0.01 |
| S100B at T10 | 0.42 | <0.005 |
| S100B at T15 | 0.36 | <0.05 |
| S100B at T24 | 0.46 | <0.005 |
| S100B at T48 | 0.004 | n.s |
The relation between S100B levels, demographic variables and neuropsychological impairment index, expressed as r-value from linear regression analysis (* = p < 0.05). Mean (± SD) S100B levels are also presented. (Est. true release = estimated true release when residual levels from contamination have been excluded)
| Mean ± St.dev. | r-value | |
| S100B at T0 | 3.63 ± 2.84 | 0.08 |
| S100B at T1 | 2.11 ± 1.81 | -0.16 |
| S100B at T2 | 1.32 ± 1.17 | -0.11 |
| S100B at T3 | 0.87 ± 0.73 | -0.12 |
| S100B at T4 | 0.60 ± 0.42 | -0.06 |
| S100B at T5 | 0.49 ± 0.38 | -0.12 |
| S100B at T6 | 0.42 ± 0.33 | -0.15 |
| S100B at T8 | 0.38 ± 0.25 | -0.12 |
| S100B at T10 | 0.31 ± 0.21 | -0.06 |
| S100B at T15 | 0.25 ± 0.16 | -0.09 |
| S100B at T24 | 0.21 ± 0.11 | -0.10 |
| S100B at T48 | 0.21 ± 0.27 | -0.09 |
| Est. true release at T1 | 1.43 ± 1.37 | -0.22 |
| Est. true residual at T2 | 1.22 ± 1.10 | -0.12 |
| Elimination rate T0-T1 | 0.50 ± 0.46 | 0.26 |
| Elimination rate T1-T2 | 0.48 ± 0.25 | -0.05 |
| Elimination rate T2-T3 | 0.68 ± 0.32 | -0.12 |
| Difference T0-T1 | 1.53 ± 1.66 | 0,30* |
| Difference T0-T2 | 2.31 ± 2.01 | 0,18 |
| Age | 0.16 | |
| Education | -0.06 | |
| Perfusion time | 0.12 | |
The results of the backwards stepwise multiple regression analysis model to explain the neuropsychological impairment index (r = 0.49, p < 0.005).
| Variable | Partial correlation | Beta | p-value |
| S100 at T0 | 0.45 | 0.845 | <0.005 |
| S100 at T1 | -0.47 | -0.939 | <0.001 |
| Age | 0.31 | 0.307 | <0.05 |
| Regression | <0.005 | ||