Abstract

Background: Postoperative headache (POH) is common in clinical practice, however, no studies about POH after Stanford type A acute aortic dissection surgery (AADS) exist. This study aims to describe the incidence, risk factors and outcomes of POH after AADS, and to construct two prediction models.Methods: Adults who underwent AADS from 2016 to 2020 in four tertiary hospitals were enrolled. Training and validation sets were randomly assigned according to a 7:3 ratio. Risk factors were identified by univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis. Nomograms were constructed and validated on the basis of independent predictors.Results: POH developed in 380 of the 1,476 included patients (25.7%). Poorer outcomes were observed in patients with POH. Eight independent predictors for POH after AADS were identified when both preoperative and intraoperative variables were analyzed, including younger age, female sex, smoking history, chronic headache history, cerebrovascular disease, use of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, more blood transfusion, and longer cardiopulmonary bypass time. White blood cell and platelet count were also identified as significant predictors when intraoperative variables were excluded from the multivariate analysis. A full nomogram and a preoperative nomogram were constructed based on these independent predictors, both demonstrating good discrimination, calibration, clinical usefulness, and were well validated. Risk stratification was performed and three risk intervals were defined based on the full nomogram and clinical practice.Conclusions: POH was common after AADS, portending poorer outcomes. Two nomograms predicting POH were developed and validated, which may have clinical utility in risk evaluation, early prevention, and doctor-patient communication.

Highlights

  • Stanford type A acute aortic dissection is a life-threatening cardiovascular disease related to significant risk of morbidity and mortality [1]

  • We aimed to investigate the incidence, risk factors and outcomes of Postoperative headache (POH) in adult patients who underwent acute aortic dissection surgery (AADS), and to construct and validate two nomogram models for POH after AADS to provide help for risk assessment and early prevention

  • The remaining 1,476 patients meeting the inclusion criteria were divided into two groups based on if one or two episodes of headache developed during their postoperative hospitalization and were further analyzed

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Summary

Introduction

Stanford type A acute aortic dissection is a life-threatening cardiovascular disease related to significant risk of morbidity and mortality [1]. Many studies describing the incidence and outcomes of POH have been conducted and several independent risk factors for POH have been reported in the literature [7,8,9,10,11,12]. None of these studies were carried out in patients undergoing AADS and available information is still lacking in this population. Postoperative headache (POH) is common in clinical practice, no studies about POH after Stanford type A acute aortic dissection surgery (AADS) exist. This study aims to describe the incidence, risk factors and outcomes of POH after AADS, and to construct two prediction models

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