Abstract

IntroductionPostoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is an adverse outcome of surgery that is more common after open heart procedures. The aim of this study is to investigate the role of tightly controlled blood glucose levels during coronary artery surgery on early and late cognitive decline. Methods40 patients older than 50 years undergoing elective coronary surgery were randomized into two groups. In the “Tight Control” group (GI), the glycemia was maintained between 80 and 120mgdL−1 while in the “Liberal” group (GII), it ranged between 80–180mgdL−1. A neuropsychological test battery was performed three times: baseline before surgery and follow-up first and 12th weeks, postoperatively. POCD was defined as a drop of one standard deviation from baseline on two or more tests. ResultsAt the postoperative first week, neurocognitive tests showed that 10 patients in the GI and 11 patients in GII had POCD. The incidence of early POCD was similar between groups. However the late assessment revealed that cognitive dysfunction persisted in five patients in the GII whereas none was rated as cognitively impaired in GI (p=0.047). ConclusionWe suggest that tight perioperative glycemic control in coronary surgery may play a role in preventing persistent cognitive impairment.

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