Akitsugu Kawashima
   Department   School of Medicine(Tokyo Women's Medical University Hospital), School of Medicine
   Position   Associate Professor
Article types Original article
Language English
Peer review Peer reviewed
Title Postcarotid endarterectomy cerebral hyperperfusion can be prevented by minimizing intraoperative cerebral ischemia and strict postoperative blood pressure control under continuous sedation.
Journal Formal name:Neurosurgery
Abbreviation:Neurosurgery
ISSN code:15244040/0148396X
Domestic / ForeginForegin
Volume, Issue, Page 64(3),pp.447-53; discussion 453-4
Author and coauthor Kawamata Takakazu, Okada Yoshikazu, Kawashima Akitsugu, Yoneyama Taku, Yamaguchi Kohji, Ono Yuko, Hori Tomokatsu
Publication date 2009/03
Summary OBJECTIVE:Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome is a major complication after carotid endarterectomy (CEA). We investigated whether our strategy of minimizing intraoperative cerebral ischemia and strict postoperative blood pressure control under continuous sedation prevented postoperative hyperperfusion.METHODS:Eighty consecutive patients undergoing CEA were studied. A shunt was used in all patients during CEA. All patients were managed postoperatively under continuous sedation for as long as 48 hours on the basis of the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) measured immediately after CEA. Postoperative hyperperfusion was assessed, on the basis of the cerebral blood flow study under sedation (propofol) after CEA, either as a greater than 30% increase in rCBF compared with the contralateral side, or a greater than 100% increase in the corrected rCBF (calculated from percentage reduction of the contralateral rCBF induced by propofol) compared with preoperative values.RESULTS:No patient developed cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome. Postoperative hyperperfusion was found at very low rates (2.5% in the middle cerebral artery territory and 1.3% in the anterior cerebral artery territory by definition 1, and 0% in both territories by definition 2). Ratios of regional oxygen saturation after internal carotid artery clamping to preclamp baseline values were greater than 0.9 in 78 of 80 patients, indicating very mild intraoperative cerebral ischemia. Parameters related to cerebral ischemia during CEA, such as regional oxygen saturation, internal carotid artery cross-clamping duration, and stump pressure (index), did not affect the incidence of postoperative hyperperfusion.CONCLUSION:The present study suggests that minimizing intraoperative cerebral ischemia using a shunt, followed by strict postoperative blood pressure control under continuous sedation, can prevent post-CEA hyperperfusion.
DOI 10.1227/01.NEU.0000339110.73385.8A
PMID 19240606