Abstract

Deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest has reduced primary morbidity and mortality in thoracic aortic surgery. Although frank neurological deficits have been proven to be a rare complication of this technique, the rate of subtle but irreversible neuropsychological disorders remains unknown. A total of 23 patients (15 male, 8 female) who had undergone surgery for dissection or aneurysm of the thoracic aorta using deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest (mean 25.5 min, range 10-75 min) were studied retrospectively. The mean follow-up was 17 months. The following psychometric tests were conducted: a computer-based test battery to assess tonic alertness and sustained attention, the trail making test (TMT part A and B), the Münchner Gedächtnistest and a verbal learning test. In addition, a cerebral dopamine D2 receptor scintigraphy (using the SPECT technique) was performed. For comparison, 10 healthy subjects were studied. With regard to tonic alertness, 69.6 and 30.4% were below the 50th and 10th centiles, respectively, according to age- and education-corrected standard values. The impairment in sustained attention correlated significantly with the duration of the circulatory arrest. On the tests assessing short-term memory, the patients scored 30% below their age- and education-corrected peers. In terms of long-term memory, 60.9 and 39.1% of the patients were below one and two standard deviations, respectively. Concerning speed of information processing whilst 78.3% of the patients were below the 50th and 21.7% below the 10th centile. Indicative of some persistent and functional brain alteration, the dopamine D2 receptor binding was significantly reduced when compared with healthy subjects. These data prove a substantial and chronic reduction of higher cognitive function in some of the patients who underwent cardiac surgery using deep hypothermic total circulatory arrest; this was accompanied by a depression of the cerebral dopamine D2 receptor binding.

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