Methods: Between January 2013 and May 2013, a total of 25 pediatric patients (10 boys, 15 girls) were included in this prospective study. Cyanotic group (group C) included 11 patients who received total correction for tetralogy of Fallot, while the non-cyanotic group (group NC) included 14 patients whose simple congenital heart disease was surgically repaired. Bilateral near-infrared spectroscopy values at varying time points: post-induction (T1), prebypass (T2), on cross-clamp (T3), after removal of crossclamp (T4), rewarming (T5), off bypass (T6), and end of the operation (T7) were recorded. Also, hemodynamic variables, body temperature, blood gas parameters, lactate, oxygen content, hematocrit values, mechanical ventilation duration, and length of intensive care unit and hospital stay were noted.
Results: There was no significant difference in the right and left cerebral oxygenation values between the groups. Similarly, no significant difference was observed in the right and left cerebral oxygenation in each individual group. None of the patients experienced morbidity or mortality following surgery.
Conclusion: Although hematocrit, arterial oxygen, and carbon dioxide pressure may alter in cyanotic cardiac diseases, bilateral cerebral oxygenation values appear to be similar between cyanotic and non-cyanotic patients. Although there were significant physiopathological differences between the groups, NIRS values did not differ.
Cyanotic heart disease is a group-type of congenital heart defects which occurs due to deoxygenated blood bypassing the lungs and entering the systemic circulation or a mixture of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood entering the systemic circulation. There is a possibility that physiopathological events associated with deoxygenated mixture and various compensatory mechanisms (i.e., polycythemia, low oxygen saturation) may affect the NIRS measurements.
In the present study, we aimed to investigate cerebral oxygenation differences between cyanotic and non-cyanotic pediatric cardiac surgery patients using the NIRS.
A total of 25 patients (10 boys, 15 girls) were included in this prospective study. The cyanotic group (group C, n=11) included only patients who received total correction of tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), while non-cyanotic group (group NC, n=14) included patients whose atrial septal (n=8), ventricular septal (n=3), atrioventricular canal (n=1), or subaortic membrane defects (n=1), or aortic stenosis (n=1) were surgically repaired. Exclusion criteria were as follows: the presence of another complex shunt, more than one prior surgery, previous complex surgical procedure, syndromes affecting the functions of organs, and extracardiac anomalies.
Intraoperative anesthesia management
The patients were pre-medicated 30 min before
anesthesia induction by oral 0.3 mg/kg midazolam.
Then, electrocardiography, pulse oximetry, and noninvasive
blood pressure monitoring were performed.
Anesthesia was induced by inhalation of sevoflurane
in the mixture of oxygen 50% and air 50%. When
an intravenous line was inserted, we switched to
total intravenous anesthesia with midazolam-fentanylrocuronium
bromide. Ventilator settings were adapted
to maintain normocapnia. All patients received
dexamethasone at a dose of 1 mg/kg. Following
anesthesia induction and intubation, radial artery and
jugular vein catheters were inserted to all patients
and head positions were arranged as midline. Body
temperature was monitored by thermal sensors placed
both in the nasopharynx and the rectum. Cerebral
oxygenation monitoring was performed by connecting
pediatric probes which were placed on the right and
left frontal forehead region to the NIRS (INVOS
Somanetics, 5100, Troy MI, USA). Values measured
during the post-induction were marked as baseline
NIRS values, and subsequent cerebral oxygenation
changes were evaluated. Anesthesia maintenance
was achieved by hourly administration of fentanyl
5 to 10 μg/kg with regular administration of midazolam
0.1 mg/kg and rocuronium bromide 0.05 mg/kg.
Intraoperative surgery management
Following heparinization, an arterial cannula on
the ascending aorta and selective vena cava cannulas
were placed. Then, CPB was initiated. The body
temperature was reduced to 28 to 32 °C. Deep
hypothermic circulatory arrest was not performed in
any patient. In group NC, the patients were cooled
down to a minimum of 30 °C, while the patients in
group C were cooled down to a minimum of 28 °C.
The ascending aorta was cross-clamped and cardiac arrest was, then, achieved by antegrade hypothermic crystalloid cardioplegia. A roller pump with membrane oxygenator was used and standard pump flow rate was set to 150 to 200 mL/kg/min. Proportional with the body surface area, pump prime solution was composed of blood, blood products, isolyte, and mannitol. Blood was not added to the prime solution of the group C. Hemofiltration was performed, if needed. To preserve myocardium, blood cardioplegia was performed in 15 to 20 min intervals during cross-clamping. After cross-clamping, topical cooling was employed in all patients. Alpha-stat arterial blood gas monitoring and activated clotting time monitoring were performed during CPB. Subsequent to the completion of surgical repair, when the body temperature was normothermic and hemodynamic variables were stable, CPB was terminated. In all patients, intraoperative evaluation was carried out using transesophageal echocardiography.
Data acquisition
Bilateral NIRS values for post-induction term (T1),
pre-cardiopulmonary bypass (T2), on cross-clamp
(T3), after removal of cross-clamp (T4), rewarming
(T5), off cardiopulmonary bypass (T6), and at the
end of the operation (T7); hemodynamic variables,
body temperature, blood gas parameters, lactate,
oxygen content, and hematocrit values, and crossclamp
and operation durations were recorded. As the main objective of the present study was to
investigate the effects of several parameters, such as
oxygen saturation, oxygen pressure, and hematocrit
level, baseline (T1) SO2 measurement was performed
while the patients was breathing 50% oxygen.
Morphine and midazolam were administered during
mechanical ventilation during the intensive care unit
stay. The patients who met the extubation criteria
were extubated, based on their clinical conditions
and blood gas values. The duration of mechanical
ventilation and length of hospital and intensive care
unit stays were also recorded for all patients.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS
for Windows version 15.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL,
USA). Normally distributed continuous variables
were expressed in mean ± standard deviation, while
categorical variables were expressed in number and
percentage. Demographic features and perioperative
variables were compared by the Mann-Whitney U
and chi-square tests. The right and left rSO2 values
recorded at seven time points during the operation were
compared by the Mann-Whitney U test for both all
patients and individually for each group. A p value of
less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Table 1: Demographic characteristics and perioperative data of patients
On the other hand, we observed no difference in the mean arterial pressure and heart rate between the groups; there were expected differences between the measurement times due to CPB. Although there was a significant difference in the pH values at T1 (p=0.016) and T2 (p=0.023) between the groups, the values were clinically within normal ranges. Partial oxygen pressure also differed between the groups, as expected (Table 2). However, we found no significant difference in the partial carbon dioxide pressure. In addition, there was a difference in the arterial oxygen saturation, hematocrit values, and oxygen content between the groups (as shown in footnotes in Table 2), indicating the compensation mechanisms in cyanotic cardiac disease.
Table 2: Physiological variables
Nonetheless, there was no significant difference in the right and left cerebral oxygenation values between the groups. Similarly, no significant difference was observed in the right and left cerebral oxygenation in each individual group (Table 3). The minimum cerebral oxygenation value in group NC was 42 and 48 for the right and left, respectively. The minimum cerebral oxygenation value in group C was 40 and 47 for the right and left, respectively. In group C, there was a significant difference in the right NIRS values between T1 and T2 (p=0.041), as well as T6 and T7 (p=0.012). Similarly, we found a difference in the left NIRS values between T1 and T2 (p=0.040), as well as T5 and T6 (p=0.040) in group C. Moreover, between baseline (T1) and termination (T7), no significant difference in the left and right NIRS values was observed (right p=0.688, left p=0.503). In group NC, there was a difference in the right NIRS values between T1 and T2 (p=0.018), as well as T5 and T6 (p=0.043). In group NC, there was a difference in the left NIRS values between T1 and T2 (p=0.048), as well as T5 and T6 (p=0.003).
Table 3. Near-infrared spectroscopy values
In group NC, between baseline (T1) and termination (T7), no significant difference in the right and left NIRS values was observed (p=0.682, left p=0.140) (Figures 1). None of the patients experienced morbidity or mortality following surgery.
Neurological complications are still significant concerns in pediatric cardiac surgery.[5] Several etiological factors, such as previous unrecognized neurological abnormality, embolic events, hypoxic insult, low cardiac output syndrome, systemic inflammatory response, altered cerebral blood flow, and cerebral metabolism, have been suggested to play a role.[5] Cerebral ischemia may occur, when oxygen supply is insufficient to meet the global/regional cerebral consumption.[5] During cardiac surgery, cerebral blood flow and metabolism may be also affected by several factors including arterial PCO2, hemoglobin level, temperature, depth of anesthesia, and pump perfusion flow rate.[5]
It is well-established that 21 to 69% of neonates and infants undergoing cardiac surgery with CPB suffer from long-term adverse neurodevelopmental complications.[6-8] The reasons are multi-factorial, and many authors have claimed that abnormal brain development resulting from a cardiac lesion can be blamed for brain injury.[6,9,10]
Coagulation during cyanotic coronary heart diseases may be due to the consumption of factors by intravenous coagulation, or liver dysfunction caused by polycythemia and stasis.[11] Due to platelet dysfunction, these patients are extremely susceptible to intravascular thrombosis and hemorrhage,[11] which can also explain why babies with TOF experience slow growth and development. Mental development may be also slow due to cerebral hypoxia in these patients. As reported in the literature, the incidence of thromboembolic factors-related cerebrovascular events is 4%; however, hemiplegia and paraplegia in children with TOF occur rather with very low hematocrit values, which may indicate that these lesions occur due to hypoxia-related anemia, rather than due to thromboembolism.[11,12] All these factors indicate the critical role of oxygenation monitoring in congenital pediatric cardiac surgery. During the progress of the disease, contribution of several factors, such as CPB, hypothermia, cannula malposition, and hemodilution, may be chaotic. In the present study, baseline cerebral oxygenation values of both children with TOF and children with noncyanotic defects were found similar.
Furthermore, polycythemia is secondary to TOF and is a mechanism developed by the system to meet the systemic oxygen demand. When the hematocrit level increases by 55 to 65%, systemic oxygen delivery increases. When the hematocrit level increases by 70 to 75%, then oxygen delivery decreases.[12] It can be explained by hyperviscosity developed in relation with high hematocrit values and, thereby, reduced cardiac output. In the present study, the hematocrit level of group C was found to be higher, compared to group NC (46.5% vs 35.3%). Since the value obtained via cerebral oximetry is the ratio of oxyhemoglobin to total hemoglobin, secondary erythrocytosis is assumed to have an effect on the rSO2 level. In two previous reports in the literature, no effects of polycythemia on rSO2 have been reported. In one of these studies, Liem et al.[13] studied neonatal patients with high fetal hemoglobin levels, and reported hematocrit levels as >65. The mean hematocrit level was also reported as 54% by Sunghee et al.[14] In another study, the baseline hematocrit level was reported as 63.9% for pediatric patients with cyanotic heart disease, and the authors concluded that it was not unlikely to obtain rSO2 values using the NIRS device (invos 5100), as the device did not read any values.[15] In the aforementioned study, as the hematocrit level decreased, the device gradually yielded results: in five patients, after reaching 61% and in four patients, after reaching 35% by hemodilution following CPB, and rSO2 was successfully m easured. In the present study, baseline hematocrit values of the cyanotic patients were much lower than those reported in the aforementioned studies, and no problem was experienced in the measurements performed by NIRS. Higher baseline hematocrit levels of group C may have increased the amount of oxyhemoglobin molecules falling in the cerebral area to be measured by the light-emitting diode (LED) beam of the NIRS device. Moreover, the oxygen content of the blood may have increased by the globally increasing hemoglobin levels. In addition, the oxygen content of group C was found to be higher in the present study. The venous component comprises about 70 to 80% of the values obtained by NIRS, which may be another reason why arterial desaturation did not adversely affect the rSO2 rates in the cyanotic patients. The compensation of the low arterial oxygen saturation by the mechanisms presented in our may have caused both groups to have similar baseline rSO2 values. The severity of the disease in cyanotic heart disease is closely associated with the degree of arteriovenous mixture, the amount of compensation mechanisms, and hemodynamic and hemostatic variables. In patients with higher hematocrit values, cardiac flow decreases due to the increased blood viscosity, which degenerates tissue oxygenation.[13] We believe that further studies on cerebral oxygenation in patients with severe cardiac cyanotic disease would be helpful in daily practice.
In pediatric cardiac surgery, anesthesia induction, intubation, positioning of the vascular lines, sternotomy, and CPB are risky phases for cerebral ischemia.[16] In the present study, at T2 (pre-cardiopulmonary bypass), T3 (on cross-clamping), and T4 (after removal of cross-clamp) measurements, there were no significant decreases in the cerebral oxygenation values. The decreases in arterial blood pressure and hypothermia in these time points were probably responsible for these reductions. In several studies, reduced cerebral oxygenation values were reported to be caused by several reasons, such as cardiac manipulation, dissection of surrounding tissues, pericardial suspension, and cannulation of vena cava and aorta, particularly during the pre-bypass period.[17-19] In the present study, cerebral oxygenation data of the pre- and post-bypass periods were similar in all time points in both groups.
Furthermore, the mean arterial pressure has an impact on the cerebral perfusion pressure, as a part of the autoregulation mechanism.[20] Brain perfusion is assumed to be stabilized within a mean blood pressure range of 50 to 150 mmHg. However, the exact timing of full autoregulation in pediatric patients is still controversial. Hayashida et al.[20] reported that, in congenital cardiac surgery, children younger than four years old were more sensitive to cerebral ischemia due to insufficient autoregulation. In the present study, the mean age of both groups was over four years; therefore, their autoregulation system might be more developed. Furthermore, in both groups, the differences in the right and left NIRS values at several time points (T1-T2, T5-T6, T6-T7) were found to be correlated with the mean arterial pressure differences in these time points. However, these differences were not considered to be clinically relevant.
In previous studies, in room air, cerebral oxygenation values of children with non-cyanotic cardiac disease were found to be very close to healthy children (68%±10%), while it was found to be lower in children with TOF (57%±12%).[13,14] In our study, baseline values at post-induction showed a right cerebral oxygenation value of 68% and a left cerebral oxygenation value of 70% in children with TOF under 50% oxygen. Improved oxygenation due to mechanical ventilation may have increased these values. Similarly, no asymmetry was observed between the right and left values. There was also no significant difference between pre- and postcorrection phases. In group C, pre-correction NIRS values were expected to be different compared to group NC, due to non-physiological state of cyanotic disease. However, there was no significant difference in the pre-correction values between the groups. Therefore, it is not surprising that post-correction values were also similar between the groups. The asymmetry in the baseline values may have been resulted from several reasons which rarely occur, such as intracranial artery stenosis, intracranial space-occupying lesion, or infarction. However, any asymmetry in cardiac surgery may indicate a problem related with aortic or venous cannulation which occurs more frequently.[21] One of the important benefits of NIRS monitoring is that it allows early detection of a mal-positioned cannula. The cerebral oxygenation values can serve as a guide to manipulate the modifiable factors, if any, such as cannula placement.
In recent years, many health care centers have adopted the NIRS monitoring for congenital heart surgery as a standard monitoring method.[22,23] In pediatric heart surgery, cerebral hemodynamic and oxygenation alterations may pose additional problems in terms of brain damage development. Therefore, real-time neurological monitoring is fundamental for neuroprotective strategies. In the literature, potential brain damage in pediatric heart surgery has been reported to have been avoided by NIRS.[22,23] It has been also shown that higher arterial saturation and narrower arterial-cerebral rSO2 saturation differences are associated with improved motor performance in pediatric heart surgery.[23] Cardiopulmonary bypass time, total length of hospital stay, and tube feedings are the main risk factors for abnormal neurodevelopment.[24] However, recent technologies should be carefully reviewed according to diseases and surgeries, and their effectiveness should be supported by evidence to yield satisfactory outcomes.
On the other hand, the present study has some limitations. During the preparation of the pediatric patients for surgery, the NIRS monitoring was unable to be performed, as the motions of the patient made intense interference. Therefore, the baseline measurements were performed after the anesthesia induction, similar to other studies.[24] In addition, the small sample size, although consistent with the previous studies reported in the literature, can be deemed as a limitation. However, considering that a 10-unit difference between each group’s NIRS values was significant, the power of the study was calculated as 92%. Because rSO2 monitoring was not a routine process, the number of patients was limited to the number of pellets obtained as part of the study. Another limitation was the lack of multiple cerebral monitoring. Along with cerebral oxygenation monitored by the NIRS, evaluation of blood flow velocity in the cerebral vasculature by transcranial Doppler ultrasound would have been more useful to gain a better insight on the cerebral hemodynamics and viscosity increase.
In conclusion, although hematocrit, arterial oxygen, and carbon dioxide pressure may alter in cyanotic cardiac diseases, bilateral cerebral oxygenation values found to be similar between cyanotic and noncyanotic patients. As the cyanotic patients were not critically ill in our study, we believe that an active compensatory mechanism to protect cerebral oxygen saturation may be present in these patients.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The NIRS plates were supplied by the R&D Commission
of our institution.
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