| Literature DB >> 28944782 |
M Wortmann1, D Böckler1, P Geisbüsch1.
Abstract
Endovascular treatment of thoracic and thoracoabdominal aortic diseases is accompanied by a risk of spinal ischemia in 1-19% of patients, depending on the entity and extent of the disease. The use of perioperative drainage of cerebrospinal fluid is one of the invasive measures to reduce the occurrence of this severe complication. This article reviews the incidence of spinal ischemia, its risk factors, the evidence for carrying out cerebrospinal fluid drainage and its modern use by means of an automated, pressure controlled system (LiquoGuard®7).Entities:
Keywords: Cerebrospinal fluid drainage; Spinal ischemia; Thoracic aortic disease; Thoracic endovascular repair; Thoracoabdominal aortic disease
Year: 2017 PMID: 28944782 PMCID: PMC5573755 DOI: 10.1007/s00772-017-0261-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gefasschirurgie ISSN: 0948-7034
Possible measures to avoid spinal ischemia
| Measures to prevent and treat spinal ischemia | References |
|---|---|
| Prevention of hypotensive phases (mean arterial pressure >90 mm Hg) | [ |
| Shortest possible treatment duration | [ |
| Staged approach in complex endovascular procedures | [ |
| Preservation of perfusion to the subclavian artery; where necessary, revascularization if stent coverage is planned | [ |
| Preservation of perfusion to the internal iliac arteries | [ |
| Drainage of cerebrospinal fluid | [ |
| Local or systemic hypothermia | [ |
| Optimization of hemoglobin levels | [ |
| Preoperative coiling of lumbar arteries | [ |
| Neurophysiological monitoring | [ |
| Drug therapy (e. g., intrathecal papaverine) | [ |
aCitation relates to open surgical treatment
bCitation relates to experimental work
Risk factors for the occurrence of spinal ischemia
| Risk factors | References |
|---|---|
| Long aortic lesions/long aortic coverage (>20 cm) | [ |
| Prior aortic surgery (e. g., abdominal aortic repair) | [ |
| Stent placement at the level of the visceral segment Th9–Th12 (origin of the arteria radicularis magna [artery of Adamkiewicz]) | [ |
| Coverage of the left subclavian artery | [ |
| Occlusion of the internal iliac arteries | [ |
| Chronic renal insufficiency | [ |
| Perioperative hypotension | [ |
| Female gender | [ |
| Long procedure time | [ |
Fig. 1Automated cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage using LiquoGuard®7, with continuous monitoring of intracranial pressure. Target pressure was set at 10 mm Hg (Pset) with alarm limits at 5 and 20 mm Hg. Current pressure is 10 mm Hg (Pcsf). If the current pressure exceeds the target pressure, CSF drainage at a maximum of 20 ml/h (Vset) begins and continues until the target pressure is achieved again. (With kind permission from the manufacturer, Möller Medical GmbH, Fulda, Germany)