Intra- and postoperative factors determining neurological complications after surgery under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest: a retrospective somatosensory evoked potential study.

Journal: Clinical Neurophysiology : Official Journal Of The International Federation Of Clinical Neurophysiology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Intraoperative median nerve SEP monitoring uses the disappearance of cortical and brain stem activities as the criterion to determine that brain cooling is sufficient in deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (CA) surgery. This study presents the results of a retrospective SEP analysis of intraoperative events that engendered neurological complications.

Methods: Median nerve SEP monitoring was performed on 58 consecutive patients who underwent surgery under deep hypothermic CA. The monitoring was retrospectively analyzed and compared with intraoperative events, and postoperative symptoms.

Results: Intraoperative SEP abnormalities were observed in 9 out of the 16 patients who presented neurological complications. Among the 7 others, the abnormalities either were present preoperatively (n = 2), occurred postoperatively (n = 3) or only involved the lower limbs (n = 2). Although the mere inspection of the intraoperative SEPs was insufficient to determine the origin of the alterations, their comparison with intraoperative events facilitated the identification of hemodynamic factors in 7 cases and embolism in two cases. There were no patients in whom CA per se caused neurological complications.

Conclusions: Intraoperative SEP monitoring helps identify intraoperative events responsible for neurological complications and prevent these in subsequent procedures. However, the neurological complications of deep hypothermic CA can also be due to pre- or postoperative factors that escape the domain of intraoperative monitoring.

Authors
S Ghariani, A Matta, R Dion, J Guérit