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Critical care medicine · Jun 1992
Cerebral blood flow pattern and autoregulation during open-heart surgery in infants and young children: a transcranial, Doppler ultrasound study.
- J Buijs, F Van Bel, A Nandorff, R Hardjowijono, T Stijnen, and J Ottenkamp.
- Department of Pediatrics, University Hospital of Leiden, The Netherlands.
- Crit. Care Med. 1992 Jun 1;20(6):771-7.
ObjectivesTo elucidate the effect of cardiopulmonary bypass on cerebral perfusion and on the autoregulatory ability of the cerebral vascular bed of infants and young children.SettingOperating room.DesignProspective study.PatientsThirteen newborn infants and young children undergoing open-heart surgery.InterventionsCerebral blood flow velocity was monitored in the patients undergoing open-heart surgery from just before the induction of anesthesia until the discontinuation of anesthesia after completion of the surgery.Measurements And Main ResultsCerebral blood flow velocity was assessed by semicontinuous measurement of temporal mean blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery using a range-gated, pulsed Doppler flowmeter with a transducer that was firmly attached to the left temporal region of the head. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and nasopharyngeal temperature were continuously monitored. During hypothermic (18.4 degrees C to 31.9 degrees C) cardiopulmonary bypass, cerebral blood flow velocity decreased and showed a close relationship with nasopharyngeal temperature (p less than .0001). During steady-state cardiopulmonary bypass, cerebral blood flow velocity showed a correlation with MAP (p less than .01). The nasopharyngeal temperature influenced this relationship: at lower (absolute) nasopharyngeal temperatures, lack of cerebral autoregulation was more common.ConclusionsThe finding suggests that cerebral blood flow decreases with decreasing nasopharyngeal temperature. During hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass, cerebral autoregulation seems to be easily disturbed, especially at low nasopharyngeal temperatures.
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