The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Assessment of subtle neurocognitive decline after surgical procedures has been hampered by heterogeneous testing techniques and a lack of reproducibility. This review summarizes the sensitivity and specificity of biomarkers of neurologic injury to determine whether they can be applied in the postoperative period to accurately predict neurocognitive decline. ⋯ Glial fibrillary acidic protein is a sensitive marker, and there are extracranial sources that are antigenically different from the brain-derived form. Serum levels of tau protein after acute neurologic injury do not reliability correlate with incidence.
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Comparative Study
Incidence and risk factors of acute kidney injury after thoracic aortic surgery for acute dissection.
Previous studies have reported a high incidence of acute kidney injury (AKI) after thoracic aortic surgery in heterogeneous patient cohorts, including various aortic diseases and the use of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. Moderate hypothermia with cerebral perfusion makes deep hypothermia nonessential, but can make end organs susceptible to ischemia during circulatory arrest. We investigated the incidence and risk factors of AKI after thoracic aortic surgery with and without moderate hypothermic circulatory arrest for acute dissection. ⋯ Acute kidney injury was common after thoracic aortic surgery for acute dissection with or without moderate hypothermic circulatory arrest and worsened 30-day mortality. Prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass and increased preoperative serum creatinine were independent risk factors for AKI, but moderate hypothermic circulatory arrest was not.