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- C D Kurth, J L Steven, L M Montenegro, H M Watzman, J W Gaynor, T L Spray, and S C Nicolson.
- Department of Anesthesiology, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 19104, USA. kurth@email.chop.edu
- Ann. Thorac. Surg. 2001 Jul 1;72(1):187-92.
BackgroundIn congenital heart disease (CHD), neurologic abnormalities suggestive of hypoxia-ischemia are often apparent before cardiac surgery. To evaluate preoperative cerebral oxygenation, this study determined cerebral O2 saturation (ScO2) in CHD and healthy children.MethodsNinety-one CHD and 19 healthy children aged less than 7 years were studied before surgical or radiologic procedures. Arterial saturation (SaO2) and ScO2 were measured by pulse-oximetry and near infrared cerebral oximetry. Cerebral O2 extraction (CEO2) was calculated (SaO2-ScO2). SaO2, ScO2, and CEO2 were compared among diagnoses. Multivariable regression was performed between ScO2 and clinical variables.ResultsIn healthy subjects, ScO2 (68%+/-10%) and CEO2 (30%+/-11%) were similar to patients with ventricular septal defect, aortic coarctation, and single ventricle after Fontan operation. ScO2 was significantly decreased in patients with patent ductus arteriosus (53%+/-8%), tetralogy of Fallot (57%+/-12%), hypoplastic left heart syndrome (46%+/-8%), pulmonary atresia (38%+/-6%), and single ventricle after aortopulmonary shunt (50%+/-7%), or bidirectional Glenn operation (43%+/-6%). CEO2 was significantly different only in patent ductus arteriosus (46%+/-8%) and hypoplastic left heart syndrome (38%+/-12%). In multivariable regression, only SaO2 was related to ScO2 (R = 0.63, p < 0.001).ConclusionsCerebral oxygenation in CHD varies with anatomy and arterial saturation, and in some patients, it is very low compared with healthy subjects.
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