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Ann Thorac Surg 1997;63:1601-1607
© 1997 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, The Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas
| Abstract |
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Material and Methods. Between January 1991 and March 1995, 161 patients were operated on for aneurysms of the ascending aorta and transverse arch. Thirty-three of the patients (20%) had an aneurysm of the ascending aorta only and 128 (80%) had aneurysms of both the ascending aorta and the transverse arch. All the patients underwent cardiopulmonary bypass, profound hypothermia, and circulatory arrest, and 120 (74%) also underwent retrograde cerebral perfusion. Median pump time was 143 minutes (range, 21 to 461 minutes). Median circulatory arrest time was 42 minutes (range, 8 to 111 minutes), and median myocardial ischemic time was 71 minutes (range, 14 to 306 minutes).
Results. The overall 30-day mortality rate was 6% (9 patients) and the incidence of stroke was 4% (7 patients). The use of retrograde cerebral perfusion demonstrated a protective effect against stroke (3 of 120 patients, or 3%) compared with no retrograde cerebral perfusion (4 of 41 patients, or 9%; odds ratio, 0.24; confidence interval, 0.06 to 0.99; p < 0.049). This was most significant in patients more than 70 years of age; none of the 36 elderly patients who received retrograde cerebral perfusion had a stroke, compared with 3 of the 13 (23%) who did not (p < 0.003). Only pump time was associated with an increased risk of stroke (odds ratio, 1.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.00 to 1.02; p < 0.005). Pump time also was associated with increased mortality (odds ratio, 1.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.00 to 1.02; p < 0.008).
Conclusion. Retrograde cerebral perfusion decreased the incidence of stroke in patients undergoing repair of aneurysms of the ascending aorta and transverse arch.
| Introduction |
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Among the many challenges presented to the cardiovascular surgeon during the repair of ascending aorta and transverse arch aneurysms is the provision of both heart and brain protection. Cardiopulmonary bypass, profound hypothermia, and circulatory arrest were a great development toward this purpose in the mid-1970s [13]. Profound hypothermia provided protection of the brain and other organs. Cardiopulmonary bypass and circulatory arrest cleared the cluttered operative field of shunts and clamps, and made graft replacement of the ascending aorta and transverse arch easier. A safe circulatory arrest period, however, has been difficult to quantify. Circulatory arrest for less than 30 minutes appears to be safe, but arrest for more than 45 minutes has been found to increase the incidence of stroke. Arrest for more than 65 minutes has been found to increase the incidence of death [4].
Mills and Ochsner [5] in 1980 first used retrograde cerebral perfusion (RCP) through the superior vena cava in a patient to treat a major air embolus and prevent damage to the brain. By 1986, Ueda and colleagues [6] had developed the clinical application of RCP as it is currently used for brain protection during extended circulatory arrest and profound hypothermia. Their innovative design used continuous rather than intermittent perfusion and simplified the perfusion circuit of earlier designs by Lemole and associates [7].
Continuing studies indicate that RCP is a valuable defense against brain damage during ascending aorta and transverse arch repair, with the potential to extend the duration of safe circulatory arrest [8, 9]. During oxygenation and cooling, the brain is protected against reperfusion injury and provided with metabolic support and removal of toxic metabolites [1012]. In 1993, my colleagues and I reported our preliminary clinical experience with RCP [13]. The results were promising for future application, and in 1995, the excellent results of our animal study prompted us to use RCP in all our patients during ascending aorta and transverse arch aneurysm repair [14]. Here, we report our latest progress and analysis of data regarding ascending aorta and transverse arch aneurysm repair, as well as the relation of stroke and death to the absence or presence of RCP.
| Material and Methods |
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| Intraoperative Data |
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| Operative Technique |
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| Statistical Methods |
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2 analysis across the data divided into quartiles, and by continuous univariate logistic regression analysis. Although continuous data are presented in quartiles in the tables, the odds ratios are against the continuous variable. Multivariate analysis was conducted by Mantel-Haenszel stratification and by multiple logistic regression for dichotomous and continuous variables, respectively. Odds ratios for continuous variables are scaled to a one-unit change in the variable. Logistic regression odds were converted to the probabilities shown in the figure using the transformation OR/(1 + OR), where OR is the multivariate odds ratio computed from the exponent of the logistic regression equation. All tests were two-tailed. The null hypothesis was rejected at p = 0.05. | Results |
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The overall 30-day mortality rate was 6% (9 of 161 patients). The 30-day mortality rates for patients who did and did not receive RCP were 6% (7 of 120 patients) and 5% (2 of 41 patients), respectively (odds ratio, 1.21; 95% confidence interval, 0.24 to 6.06; p < 0.81). Although patients more than 70 years of age who received RCP had relatively fewer early deaths (1 of 36, or 2%) than those who did not receive RCP (1 of 13, or 8%), these numbers were not statistically significant (odds ratio, 0.34; 95% confidence interval, 0.02 to 5.92; p < 0.45).
Overall, only pump time (odds ratio, 1.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.00 to 1.02; p < 0.005) was significantly associated with an increased risk of stroke (odds ratio, 1.01, 95% confidence interval, 1.00 to 1.02; p < 0.008). The increased probability of stroke associated with increased pump time with or without RCP is illustrated in Figure 3
. Table 1
outlines the patient characteristics that were analyzed for association with the incidence of stroke and Table 2
outlines the characteristics that were associated with early mortality. Table 3
shows the multiple logistic regression analysis of stroke odds versus pump time and RCP use. The odds ratios for stroke and death in regard to pump time are continuous and reflect a 1.01-fold increase in odds per minute.
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| Comment |
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In this study of 161 patients undergoing ascending aorta and transverse arch aneurysm repair, RCP reduced the incidence of stroke, which is consistent with the findings of our earlier animal experiment and clinical study. The beneficial effects of RCP were especially significant in patients more than 70 years of age. Age has been explored as a risk factor in many studies involving ascending aorta and transverse arch aneurysm repair procedures that used cardiopulmonary bypass, moderate hypothermia, cold cardioplegia or cardiopulmonary bypass, profound hypothermia, and circulatory arrest. For patients more than 70 years of age, the early mortality rate has varied from 14% to 33% [4, 15, 16]. In these studies, age was declared a significant factor for patient outcome. Of interest is the fact that in these studies, except for 50 of the 656 patients (8%) in the study by Svensson and colleagues [4], there was no perfusion of head vessels.
In our current series, age was not a significant factor. We found in previous studies that RCP is differentially more protective in older patients than in younger patients [17]. We hypothesized that because stroke is a multifactorial occurrence that combines host factors with external sources of risk (ie, ischemic time), and because younger patients have less atherosclerosis and better brain perfusion than older patients, they can better tolerate ischemic insult. Younger patients, therefore, received less benefit from RCP than older patients for any given ischemic time.
Recently, we also examined the effect of RCP in the staged extensive aneurysm repair known as the elephant-trunk technique [18]. We found that no patients undergoing the elephant-trunk technique with RCP had a stroke, compared with 20% of those without RCP.
In conclusion, RCP had a dramatic effect in reducing the incidence of stroke in patients undergoing ascending aorta and transverse arch aneurysm repair. This was most noticeable for patients more than 70 years of age, who ordinarily are at higher risk. Also observed was a benefit to patients undergoing staged repair of extensive aneurysms. We will continue to use RCP with cardiopulmonary bypass, circulatory arrest, and profound hypothermia in all our patients undergoing ascending aorta and transverse arch repair. In the future, a preoperative psychometric analysis to compare the postoperative cognitive problems of these patients should be addressed. We also strongly believe that a comparison of the effectiveness of antegrade perfusion of the brachiocephalic arteries versus RCP should be settled by a randomized study.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Address reprint requests to Dr Safi, 6550 Fannin, Suite 1603, Houston, TX 77030.
| References |
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