• Eur J Cardiothorac Surg · May 2004

    Evaluation of brain injury after coronary artery bypass grafting. A prospective study using neuropsychological assessment and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging.

    • Stephan C Knipp, Nadine Matatko, Hans Wilhelm, Marc Schlamann, Parwis Massoudy, Michael Forsting, Hans Christian Diener, and Heinz Jakob.
    • Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, University Hospital, Essen, Germany. stephan.knipp@uni-essen.de
    • Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2004 May 1;25(5):791-800.

    ObjectiveNeurocognitive dysfunction is a common complication after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Studies using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have demonstrated that new focal brain lesions can occur after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), even in patients without apparent neurological deficits. Diffusion-weighted MRI is superior to conventional MRI and allows for sensitive and early detection of ischemic brain lesions. We prospectively investigated cerebral injury early and 3 months after CABG using diffusion-weighted MRI and related the findings to clinical data and neurocognitive functions.MethodsTwenty-nine patients [67.6+/-8.6 (52-85) years, 5 females] undergoing elective CABG with CPB were examined before surgery, at discharge and 3 months after surgery. A battery of standardized neuropsychological tests and questionnaires on depression and mood were administered. Conventional and diffusion-weighted MRI of the brain was performed and new lesions were analyzed. Clinical characteristics, neuropsychological test performance and radiographic data were collected and compared.ResultsThere was no major neurological complication after CABG. Thirteen patients (45%) exhibited 32 new ischemic lesions on postoperative diffusion-weighted MRI. The lesions were small, rounded and equally dispersed in both hemispheres. Eight patients had at least two lesions. At discharge, significant deterioration of neuropsychological performance was observed in 6 of the 13 tests compared to baseline assessment. By 3 months postoperatively, 5 of the 6 tests returned to preoperative levels. Verbal learning ability, however, remained impaired. The presence of new focal brain lesions was not associated with impaired neuropsychological performance. There was also no correlation between clinical variables, intraoperative parameters and postoperative complications and MRI findings.ConclusionsAlthough neurocognitive decline after CABG is mostly transient, memory impairment can persist for months. New ischemic brain lesions on postoperative diffusion-weighted MRI do not appear to account for the persistent neurocognitive decline.

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