| Literature DB >> 29743884 |
Chenxi Huang1, Johan Mårtensson2, Ismail Gögenur1, Mohammad Sohail Asghar3.
Abstract
Surgical patients are at high risk of developing postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) and postoperative delirium (POD). POCD and POD are associated with increased morbidity and mortality and worsening functional outcomes leading to severe socioeconomic consequences for the patient and the society in general. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers a unique opportunity to study the anatomy and function of the brain. MRI thus plays an important role in elucidating the neuronal component of POCD and POD. Our aim has been to systematically gather MRI findings that are related to POCD and POD. Systematic searches were conducted in PubMed, EMBASE, and PsycINFO: MRI studies investigating patients with POCD as identified by perioperative cognitive testing or patients with delirium identified postoperatively by the Confusion Assessment Method. A total of ten eligible papers were included with a total of 269 surgical patients, 36 patient controls, and 55 healthy controls who all underwent MRI examination. These studies suggested that reduction of thalamic and hippocampal volumes and reduction of cerebral blood flow may be associated with POCD, while presurgery/preexisting and postoperative white matter pathology may be associated with POD. However, the evidence from these studies is rather weak. Future MRI studies are warranted to verify the current findings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29743884 PMCID: PMC5878869 DOI: 10.1155/2018/1281657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection.
Overview of included postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) studies.
| Study | Design | Surgery | Patients and controls (age) | Cognitive test (timing) | MRI system | MRI timing | MRI modalities | Statistics | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sato et al. [ | Prospective, case-control | Breast cancer surgery | 30 patients (60 ± 7) | Digital span back | 3.0T Philips | 1x presurgery | T1 weighted VBM | ANCOVA | Attention domain subtest lower score in patients compared to control after 1 week. |
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| Price et al. [ | Prospective, case-control | Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) | 31 patients (70.8 ± 7.0) Charlson comorbidity 1 + 1 | Hopkins verbal learning, | 3.0T Siemens | 1x presurgery | T1 weighted | Hierarchical regression models | Preoperative leukoaraiosis and lacunae volume improve the prediction model of baseline Stroop color word test of 3 wk postoperative executive function decline, but not with memory decline |
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| Chen et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Open abdominal surgery | 39 patients | Wechsler adult memory scale and intelligence scale, | 1.5T Siemens | 1x presurgery | T1 weighted | POCD (13) versus non-POCD (23) | 6% reduction of hippocampus volume in POCD group compared to non-POCD, this reduction is correlated negatively with |
Overview of included postoperative delirium (POD) studies.
| Study | Design | Surgery | Patients and controls (age) | Delirium test (timing) | MRI system | MRI timing | MRI modalities | Statistics | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Racine et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Mixed surgery | 145 patients | CAM | 3T GE | 1x presurgery | Cortical thickness |
| The cortical thickness did not predict occurrences of delirium in these patients; however, among those who had delirium, the thinner cortical thickness was associated with worse delirium severity. |
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| Cavallari et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Mixed surgery | 113 patients | CAM | 3T GE | 1x presurgery | DTI protocol | GML | The delirium severity was positively and negatively associated with fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (DM), respectively, and primarily in white matter of the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes |
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| Hshieh et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Mixed surgery | 146 patients | CAM | 3T GE | 1x presurgery | ASL-derived CBF | Multiple regression models | No significant differences in whole brain CBF nor in the globally normalized voxel wise analysis. CBF in parietal lobe is correlated to cognitive performance |
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| Cavallari et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Mixed surgery | 136 patients | CAM | 3T GE | 1x presurgery | DTI protocol |
| DTI abnormality in cerebellum, hippocampus, basal forebrain, thalamus, ant commissure |
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| Cavallari et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Mixed surgery | 146 patients | CAM | 3T GE | 1x presurgery | T2 weighted and FLAIR | Multiple regression models | No significant differences in white matter hypersensitivity, global brain atrophy, and hippocampal volume |
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| Saczynski et al. [ | Prospective, cross-sectionalstudy | Mixed surgery | 146 patients | CAM | 3T GE | 1x presurgery | T2 weighted and FLAIR | Multiple regression models | 24% of total patients had delirium, no correlation between intracranial volume (ICV) and POD |
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| Root et al. [ | Retrospective, case-controlstudy | Partial lung resection | 23 lung cancer patients with delirium (73.4, 54.0–86.0) | Retrospective medical record review in regard to CAM | 1.5T GE | 1x presurgery | T1 weighted and FLAIR | Delirium versus nondelirium (ANCOVA) | Higher white matter hyperintensity significantly associated with POD |
Overview of MRI findings in postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) and delirium (POD), respectively.
| Investigated MRI correlates | POCD | POD |
|---|---|---|
| Hippocampus volume | Reduced [ | No difference [ |
| White matter hyperintensity (bright areas on images seen in normal aging or neurological disease) | Increased [ | Increased [ |
| Lacune (cerebrospinal fluid filled cavities in white matter, seen in normal aging or neurological disease) | Increased [ | N/A |
| Intracranial volume (ICV) (total volume within the cranial borders) | N/A | No difference [ |
| Total parenchymal volume (total brain volume (grey and white matter)) | N/A | No difference [ |
| Cerebral blood flow (blood perfusion in the brain, hypoperfusion is for example related to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease) | Reduced [ | No difference [ |
| Thalamus volume | Reduced [ | N/A |
| White matter integrity (DTI abnormalities, mean and radial diffusivity, axial diffusivity, and fractional anisotropy) | Reduced [ | Reduced [ |
Newcastle Ottawa Scale of included studies.
| Study | The selection of the study groups | The comparability of the groups | The ascertainment of the exposure of interest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Racine et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Cavallari et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Root et al. [ | ☆☆ | ☆ | ☆ |
| Saczynski et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Cavallari et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Cavallari et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Hshieh et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Chen et al. [ | ☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆ |
| Price et al. [ | ☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
| Sato et al. [ | ☆☆☆☆ | ☆☆ | ☆☆ |
Figure 2A brief overview of MRI modalities to elucidate cerebral pathophysiology in relation to POCD and POD. (a) Anatomical MRI scan showing white matter and grey matter of the brain. (b) (Left side) Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analyses the anatomical images to determine possible changes in grey matter volume and morphometry. (b) (Right side) Diffusion tension imaging (DTI) can characterize white matter integrity and tracts. These modalities can potentially reveal even minor neuroplasticity. (c) Measurement of cerebral hemodynamics with intravenous (IV) contrast permits determination of, for example, cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral blood volume (CBV), and cerebral oxidative metabolic rate (CMRO2), while CBF also can be measured without IV contrast by arterial spin labeling (ASL). (d) Functional MRI can indirectly determine neuronal activation by measuring concomitant changes in blood flow. Blood-oxygenation-level dependent (BOLD) fMRI signal is useful in investigating brain activation to an explicit task. Resting state fMRI (rsfMRI) can reveal coactivation of distinct regions across the brain in patients that are not performing an explicit task.