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Medline ® Abstracts for References 1-4

of 'Neurologic complications of cardiac surgery'

1
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Stroke following coronary artery bypass grafting: a ten-year study.
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Gardner TJ, Horneffer PJ, Manolio TA, Pearson TA, Gott VL, Baumgartner WA, Borkon AM, Watkins L Jr, Reitz BA
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Ann Thorac Surg. 1985;40(6):574.
 
To identify possible risk factors for the occurrence of stroke during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), the cases of 3,279 consecutive patients having isolated CABG from 1974 to 1983 were reviewed. During this period, the risk of death fell from 3.9% to 2.6%. The stroke rate, however, fell initially but then rose from 0.57% in 1979 to 2.4% in 1983. Adjustment of these data for age clearly demonstrated that the risk of stroke has increased largely because of an increase in the mean age of patients undergoing CABG procedures. A case-control study involving all 56 stroke victims and 112 control patients was used to identify those risk factors significantly associated with the development of stroke in univariate analysis: increased age (63 versus 57 years in stroke patients and controls, respectively; p less than 0.0001); preexisting cerebrovascular disease (20% versus 8%; p less than 0.03); severe atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta (14% versus 3%; p less than 0.005); protracted cardiopulmonary bypass time (122 minutes versus 105 minutes; p less than 0.005); and severe perioperative hypotension (23% versus 4%; p less than 0.0001). Other variables not found to correlate with postoperative stroke included previous myocardial infarction, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, lower extremity vascular disease, preoperative left ventricular function, and intraoperative perfusion techniques. Elderly patients who have preexisting cerebrovascular disease or severe atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta or who require extensive revascularization procedures have a significantly increased risk of postoperative stroke.
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PMID
2
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Adverse cerebral outcomes after coronary bypass surgery. Multicenter Study of Perioperative Ischemia Research Group and the Ischemia Research and Education Foundation Investigators.
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Roach GW, Kanchuger M, Mangano CM, Newman M, Nussmeier N, Wolman R, Aggarwal A, Marschall K, Graham SH, Ley C
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N Engl J Med. 1996;335(25):1857.
 
BACKGROUND: Acute changes in cerebral function after elective coronary bypass surgery is a difficult clinical problem. We carried out a multicenter study to determine the incidence and predictors of -- and the use of resources associated with -- perioperative adverse neurologic events, including cerebral injury.
METHODS: In a prospective study, we evaluated 2108 patients from 24 U.S. institutions for two general categories of neurologic outcome: type I (focal injury, or stupor or coma at discharge) and type II (deterioration in intellectual function, memory deficit, or seizures).
RESULTS: Adverse cerebral outcomes occurred in 129 patients (6.1 percent). A total of 3.1 percent had type I neurologic outcomes (8 died of cerebral injury, 55 had nonfatal strokes, 2 had transient ischemic attacks, and 1 had stupor), and 3.0 percent had type II outcomes (55 had deterioration of intellectual function and 8 had seizures). Patients with adverse cerebral outcomes had higher in-hospital mortality (21 percent of patients with type I outcomes died, vs. 10 percent of those with type II and 2 percent of those with no adverse cerebral outcome; P<0.001 for all comparisons), longer hospitalization (25 days with type I outcomes, 21 days with type II, and 10 days with no adverse outcome; P<0.001), and a higher rate of discharge to facilities for intermediate- or long-term care (69 percent, 39 percent, and 10 percent ; P<0.001). Predictors of type I outcomes were proximal aortic atherosclerosis, a history of neurologic disease, and older age; predictors of type II outcomes were older age, systolic hypertension on admission, pulmonary disease, and excessive consumption of alcohol.
CONCLUSIONS: Adverse cerebral outcomes after coronary bypass surgery are relatively common and serious; they are associated with substantial increases in mortality, length of hospitalization, and use of intermediate- or long-term care facilities. New diagnostic and therapeutic strategies must be developed to lessen such injury.
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Kaiser Permanente Medical Center, San Francisco, CA, USA.
PMID
3
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Neurologic dysfunction in cardiac surgery
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Boyd, WC, Hartman, GS
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New Horiz. 1999; 7:504.
 
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Cognitive and neurologic outcomes after coronary-artery bypass surgery.
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Selnes OA, Gottesman RF, Grega MA, Baumgartner WA, Zeger SL, McKhann GM
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N Engl J Med. 2012 Jan;366(3):250-7.
 
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Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205-1910, USA. oselnes@jhmi.edu
PMID