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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2018
ReviewLong-term neurocognitive outcomes following surgery and anaesthesia in early life.
- Tom G Hansen and Thomas Engelhardt.
- Department of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care - Paediatric Section, Odense University Hospital.
- Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2018 Jun 1; 31 (3): 297-301.
Purpose Of ReviewRepeated controversial and alarming statements of the potential dangers of anaesthetic agents on neurological outcomes in children continue to be issued based primarily on preclinical studies. This review assesses the current evidence of laboratory and clinical data and identifies areas of concerns.Recent FindingsPublished animal and laboratory data consistently indicate that prolonged and excessive use of anaesthetic agents can lead to morphological changes and neurocognitive impairment in animals without a clear cut-off age or a superiority of one technique over another. Retrospective human studies and prospective clinical trials indicate that short exposures to anaesthesia and surgery are safe and have no effect on long-term neurological outcomes. Small and consistent continuing improvements in the perioperative period (aggregation of marginal gains) will impact on long-term neurological morbidity in humans.SummaryIt is biologically plausible that anaesthetic agents may induce structural changes during mammalian brain development and beyond. However, in the absence of alternatives the impact of the choice of anaesthetic drugs on long-term neurocognitive outcomes is almost certainly to be of limited relevance in humans. The underlying disease processes, surgical intervention, and trauma as well as other known perioperative factors more significantly affect these outcomes.
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