| Literature DB >> 21401948 |
Axel Fudickar1, Sönke Peters, Claudia Stapelfeldt, Götz Serocki, Jörn Leiendecker, Patrick Meybohm, Markus Steinfath, Berthold Bein.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neurologic deficits after cardiac surgery are common complications. Aim of this prospective observational pilot study was to investigate the incidence of postoperative cognitive deficit (POCD) after cardiac surgery, provided that relevant decrease of cerebral oxygen saturation (cSO2) is avoided during cardiopulmonary bypass.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21401948 PMCID: PMC3068111 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2253-11-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Demographic data of patients (*Values are mean (SD)).
| Age (yrs) | 67.5 (10.9)* |
| Weight (kg) | 77.1 (11.4)* |
| Height (cm) | 172.8 (8.4)* |
Surgical procedures and number of patients.
| Surgical procedure: | Number of patients |
|---|---|
| Aorto-coronary bypass | 18 |
| Aortic valve repair + Aorto-coronary bypass | 6 |
| Aortic valve repair | 3 |
| Mitral valve repair + Aorto-coronary bypass | 3 |
| Mitral valve repair | 2 |
Figure 1Cerebral oxygen saturation (cSO. The additional grid line shows the absolute lower limit of cSO2 (55%). Data is given as median, 25th/75th percentile and range.
Figure 2Correlation of severity of postoperative neurocognitive deficit (POCD) defined as the number of tests with clinically relevant decline (decrease of postoperative test results below 80% of preoperative baseline) after cardiac surgery with minimal cSO. POCD was investigated by a set of five neuropsychological tests 1 day before and 4 days after heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.
Figure 3Receiver-operator characteristic (ROC) curve of an absolute threshold of 65% for minimal cSO. The threshold discriminates patients with and without postoperative neurocognitive deficit with a sensitivity of 86.7% and a specificity of 65.0% by trend (p = 0.03, AUC = 0.61, without Bonferroni correction). Dashed line is line of identity.