• J Neurosurg Anesthesiol · Jan 2011

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study

    Deeper total intravenous anesthesia reduced the incidence of early postoperative cognitive dysfunction after microvascular decompression for facial spasm.

    • Jianxiong An, Qiwu Fang, Changsheng Huang, Xiaoyan Qian, Ting Fan, Yanjun Lin, and Qulian Guo.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Central South University Xiangya Hospital, Beijing, China.
    • J Neurosurg Anesthesiol. 2011 Jan 1;23(1):12-7.

    ObjectiveTo investigate whether the depth of total intravenous anesthesia affects postoperative cognitive dysfunction.MethodsNinety-six patients with facial spasm who were scheduled to receive microvascular decompression were randomly divided into 2 groups: deeper anesthesia (n = 50) and lighter anesthesia (n = 46). Exclusion criteria included: a history of neurologic or mental disease, serum creatinine in excess of 177 μmol/L, active liver disease, cardiac dysfunction, pulmonary dysfunction, endocrine disease, metabolic disease, a history of surgery, fewer than 6 years of school, inability to complete neuropsychologic testing, vision dysfunction, and auditory dysfunction. Propofol and sufentanil were used for anesthesia induction and propofol and remifentanil were used for the maintenance of anesthesia. A battery of 9 neuropsychologic was administered preoperatively and 5 days after surgery. A postoperative deficit was defined as a postop decrement to preop score greater than 1 standard deviation on any test. Patients who experienced 2 or more deficits were deemed to have early postoperative cognitive dysfunction.ResultsEighty patients completed both preoperative and postoperative neuropsychologic testing, of which 40 each were in the deeper and lighter anesthesia group. Postoperative early cognitive dysfunction occurred in 4 patients (10%) in the deeper anesthesia group and in 11 patients (27.5%) in the lighter anesthesia group. The incidence of the postoperative cognitive dysfunction was significantly reduced in the deeper anesthesia group compared with the lighter anesthesia group (P < 0.05, χ).ConclusionDeeper total intravenous anesthesia can decrease the incidence of cognitive dysfunction in the early postoperative period.

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