Woo-Young Jo1, Hyongmin Oh1, Heewon Kim1, Hyun-Kyu Yoon1, Hyung-Chul Lee1, Won-Sang Cho2, Jeong-Eun Kim2, Hee-Pyoung Park3. 1. Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea. 2. Department of Neurosurgery, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea. 3. Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea. Electronic address: hppark@snu.ac.kr.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Platelets play a critical role in the inflammatory response, accompanied by microvascular endothelial dysfunction, underlying postoperative symptomatic cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (PSCHS) after superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) anastomosis in moyamoya patients. We examined whether the preoperative platelet count can predict PSCHS after STA-MCA anastomosis in such patients. METHODS: In 160 adult moyamoya patients undergoing 186 STA-MCA anastomoses, preoperative (demographics, initial clinical manifestation, and Suzuki grade), intraoperative (surgical time, operative side, fluid balance, and maximum and minimum mean blood pressure before and after vessel anastomosis), immediate postoperative (APACHE 2 score), and laboratory (hemoglobin and C-reactive protein levels and white blood cell and platelet counts) data were collected retrospectively. RESULTS: 84 patients (90 sides, 48.4 %) developed PSCHS with a median(IQR) onset of postoperative day 1(0-3) and duration of 4(3-7) days. The preoperative (25.2[22.8-28.0] vs. 23.1[19.7-26.2] ×104/μL, p = 0.009) platelet count was significantly higher in patients with PSCHS than in those without. The preoperative platelet count (odds ratio[95 % confidence interval], 1.14[1.03-1.27], p = 0.011), operation on the dominant hemisphere (6.84 [3.26-14.36], p < 0.001), and negative fluid balance (2.41[1.04-5.59], p = 0.040) were significant independent predictors of PSCHS. The optimal cut-off value for preoperative platelet count was 22.7 ×104/μL, and PSCHS developed more frequently in cases with a preoperative platelet count ≥ 22.7 × 104/μL (2.90[1.54-5.45]; p = 0.001). CONCLUSION: A high preoperative platelet count may be associated with the development of PSCHS after STA-MCA anastomosis in adult moyamoya patients.
OBJECTIVE: Platelets play a critical role in the inflammatory response, accompanied by microvascular endothelial dysfunction, underlying postoperative symptomatic cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome (PSCHS) after superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) anastomosis in moyamoya patients. We examined whether the preoperative platelet count can predict PSCHS after STA-MCA anastomosis in such patients. METHODS: In 160 adult moyamoya patients undergoing 186 STA-MCA anastomoses, preoperative (demographics, initial clinical manifestation, and Suzuki grade), intraoperative (surgical time, operative side, fluid balance, and maximum and minimum mean blood pressure before and after vessel anastomosis), immediate postoperative (APACHE 2 score), and laboratory (hemoglobin and C-reactive protein levels and white blood cell and platelet counts) data were collected retrospectively. RESULTS: 84 patients (90 sides, 48.4 %) developed PSCHS with a median(IQR) onset of postoperative day 1(0-3) and duration of 4(3-7) days. The preoperative (25.2[22.8-28.0] vs. 23.1[19.7-26.2] ×104/μL, p = 0.009) platelet count was significantly higher in patients with PSCHS than in those without. The preoperative platelet count (odds ratio[95 % confidence interval], 1.14[1.03-1.27], p = 0.011), operation on the dominant hemisphere (6.84 [3.26-14.36], p < 0.001), and negative fluid balance (2.41[1.04-5.59], p = 0.040) were significant independent predictors of PSCHS. The optimal cut-off value for preoperative platelet count was 22.7 ×104/μL, and PSCHS developed more frequently in cases with a preoperative platelet count ≥ 22.7 × 104/μL (2.90[1.54-5.45]; p = 0.001). CONCLUSION: A high preoperative platelet count may be associated with the development of PSCHS after STA-MCA anastomosis in adult moyamoya patients.