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Neurological complications after a cardiac surgery are common and have a large impact on patient outcomes. They are the result of a combination of numerous factors, many of them associated with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Blood pressure control is essential to reduce the incidence of cerebral hypoperfusion and ischemic stroke during and after cardiac surgery. Cerebral oxygen saturation can be tracked using near infrared spectroscopy to assess cerebral perfusion and oxygenation. Careful temperature management plays a key role in preventing cerebral morbidity. Despite multiple attempts to find pharmacologic strategies to prevent neurologic injury, no such solution has been found to reduce the burden of neurologic complications associated with cardiac surgery.
To analyse the changes of different ventilation on regional cerebral oxygen saturation and cerebral blood flow in infants during ventricular septal defect repair.
Methods:
Ninety-two infants younger than 1 year were enrolled in the study. End-expiratory tidal pressure of carbon dioxide was maintained at 40–45 and 35–39 mmHg in relative low and high ventilation groups. Regional cerebral oxygen saturation and flow velocity of the middle cerebral artery were recorded after anaesthesia (T0), cut pericardium (T1), separation from cardiopulmonary bypass (T2), the end of modified ultrafiltration, (T3) and at the end of operation (T4).
Results:
The relative low ventilation group exhibited a significantly high regional cerebral oxygen saturation at each time point except for T2 (T0:77 ± 4, T1:76 ± 5, T3:76 ± 8, T4:76 ± 8, respectively, p < 0.001). Flow velocity of the middle cerebral artery in the relative low ventilation group was higher compared to the relative high ventilation group at each time point except for T2 (T0:53 ± 14, T1:54 ± 15, T3:53 ± 17, T4:52 ± 16, respectively, p < 0.001). Between the two groups, T2 showed the lowest middle cerebral artery flow velocity (relative low ventilation: 39 ± 15, relative high ventilation: 39 ± 11, p < 0.001).
Conclusion:
The infants’ regional cerebral oxygen saturation and middle cerebral artery flow velocity performed better in the range of 40–45 mmHg end-expiratory tidal pressure of carbon dioxide during CHD surgery. Modified ultrafiltration increased cerebral oxygen saturation. It was important to regulate ventilation in order to balance cerebral oxygen in infants.
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