Methods: Between December 2015 and February 2016, a total of 54 patients (42 males, 12 females; mean age 59.6±11.6 years; range, 31 to 83 years) undergoing elective cardiopulmonary bypass were prospectively included. Preparation for surgery, anesthesia, and standard data monitoring were performed in each patient with additional regional cerebral oxygen saturation monitorization. The patients underwent the Mini-Mental State Examination 24 h before and after the operation. Cerebral oximetry and blood glucose levels were sampled at pre-defined time points (T0: before anesthesia; T1: after anesthesia; T2: after ischemia; T3: after reperfusion, and T4: after surgery).
Results: No statistically significant relationship was found in the different stages of cardiopulmonary bypass between the altered cerebral oxygen saturation values and blood glucose levels. There was no significant difference between the Mini-Mental State Examination scores of the patients with respect to either presence of diabetes mellitus or timing of the test.
Conclusion: Our study findings show that glycemic changes during cardiopulmonary bypass do not alter the regional cerebral oxygenation. In addition, when other variables are kept constant, changes in the blood glucose levels do not alter postoperative neurological functions.
It is important to protect the brain precisely under surgical stress, as injuries caused by even subtle changes in blood pressure, glucose, and electrolyte values may result in functional losses.[3] Many intraoperative strategies are available to measure and reduce brain damage and improve surgical outcomes during CPB. However, none of the preventive measures has been proven to be fully effective, yet. Recently, non-invasive monitoring of regional cerebral oxygen saturation (rSO2) by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has been introduced to evaluate the adequacy of tissue oxygenation.[4,5] In patients undergoing primary coronary artery bypass surgery, a significant association was found between prolonged cerebral desaturation demonstrated by the NIRS and early cognitive decline.[6] It is well-known that cerebral oxygen saturation can be affected by many factors such as, cerebral blood flow, cerebral metabolic rate, hemoglobin concentration, and arterial oxygen saturation.[4]
In the present study, the dynamic trends of cerebral oxygenation were investigated with blood glucose levels in patients undergoing CPB. We aimed to evaluate whether a potential relationship was present between regional cerebral oxygenation reflected by the NIRS and neurocognitive function tests and the blood glucose levels. Our secondary aim was to identify the difference between the patients with and without diabetes mellitus (DM) in terms of the NIRS and neurocognitive function tests during this period.
Anesthetic and surgical procedure
All patients were premedicated with oral diazepam
(5 mg) the night before and intramuscular morphine
sulfate (0.1 mg.kg-1) 45 min before surgery. Noninvasive
monitoring was established and radial artery
was cannulated under local anesthesia. This procedure
enabled invasive monitoring of arterial blood pressure.
It was also used to obtain blood samples required for
the blood gas analysis. The NIRS probes were applied
bilaterally to the forehead of the patients before the
induction of anesthesia and cerebral oxygen saturation
was continuously measured using the INVOS 5100
regional oximeter (Somanetics Corporation, Troy,
Michigan, USA) and recorded for the duration of the
operative procedure and in the intensive care unit (ICU)
until 24 h postoperatively.[7] The anesthesiologists reversed any 10% decline in the rSO2 values for a
duration exceeding 15 sec relative to the baseline value
according to an interventional algorithm.[8] Anesthesia
was similar for all patients, and consisted of 10 μg.kg-1
fentanyl in combination with 3-5 mg.kg-1 thiopental
sodium and 0.6 mg.kg-1 rocuronium bromide given
intravenously at induction. After intubation, anesthesia
was maintained by additional doses of fentanyl
(5 μg.kg-1) and rocuronium bromide (0.03 mg.kg-1), and
by inhalation of 0.5 to 2% sevoflurane. The depth of
anesthesia during surgery was between 40-60 according
to the bispectal index (BIS XP; Aspect Medical
Systems, Newton, MA, USA). The patients received air
and oxygen (fractional inspired oxygen concentration
of 50%) throughout surgery. Ventilation during the
anesthesia was performed in a volume-controlled
mode. Respiratory rate and tidal volume were adjusted
in the way that normocapnia was achieved. Preparation
for surgery, anesthesia, and perioperative vital data
monitoring (five-channel electrocardiography, pulse
oximetry, capnography, nasopharyngeal and rectal
temperature, arterial blood pressure, and central
venous pressure [7F Arrow, Erdingen, Germany]) were
done in the same standardized way for each patient.
During surgery, a median sternotomy was made,
heparin was given (350 IU kg-1), aortic and right atrial
venous cannulas were inserted, and a standard CPB
with moderate systemic hypothermia (28 °C to 30 °C
of nasopharyngeal temperature) was instituted using
a Jostra HL 20 hollow-fiber membrane oxygenator
and a roller-pump generating a non-pulsatile flow.
Activated coagulation time (ACT) was kept above 450 sec throughout the CPB period. An arterial filter was included in the circuit. A standard pump priming solution was used in each patient. Routine surgical technique and cardioprotective strategies were used in all patients. For myocardial protection, the aorta was cross-clamped and cold anterograde and retrograde intermittent cardioplegia (Plegisol® Abbott, North Chicago, IL, USA) were used. In addition, CPB flow was maintained between 2.2 L min-1.m-2 and 2.5 L min-1.m-2. The mean perfusion pressure was maintained between 50 and 80 mmHg on bypass. Vasopressors and vasodilators were administered, where necessary. Hematocrit concentrations were maintained above 21% during bypass. We targeted to achieve a blood glucose level of 140 to 200 mg.dL-1 in all patients.[9] The blood glucose levels >200 mg.dL-1 were intervened by continuous insulin infusion (50 IU regular insulin in 500 mL of dextrose 10% in water in a range of 1 IU to 5 IU h-1). Blood glucose levels which fell below that range resulted in termination of the insulin infusion.
After the surgical procedure, reperfusion of the heart and rewarming to temperature of 36 °C, the heart was placed in atrioventricular mode at a rate of 90 bpm, and the patients were separated from CPB. After removal of the aortic cannula, heparin activity was neutralized with protamine at a ratio of 1 mg of protamine per 100 U heparin. Protamine administration was further guided by ACT measurements aiming at 140 sec. When the mean arterial pressure was below 60 mmHg, vasopressor therapy was initiated. During surgery, we recorded the duration of aortic clamping and CPB, volume of cardioplegic solution used, volume of hemodilution and infusions, diuresis, and minimum body temperature. At the end of the surgical procedure, the patients were transferred to the ICU. When hemodynamically stable and rewarmed, the patients were weaned from the ventilator and extubated.
At five time points, the blood samples were collected and the reference level (T0) was able to be obtained immediately after the cannulation of the arterial system and before anesthesia; the second sample (T1) was taken 20 min after anesthesia was introduced; the third sample (T2) was taken after 20 min of the aortic cross-clamp; the fourth sample (T3) was taken 20 min after the removal of the aortic cross-clamp; and the final sample (T4) was obtained by venipuncture 24 h after the surgery. The serum electrolytes (K+, Na+, Ca2+) and hemoglobin, hematocrit, blood glucose, lactate, and arterial blood gases were measured using the blood samples taken from the radial artery.
Sample size estimation
The primary end point of this study was defined
as a positive correlation between the changes in
blood glucose levels and regional cerebral saturation
values at five critical time points of CPB. Sample
size estimation was performed using the Power and
Sample Size (PASS) version 11 for Windows software.
(SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) According to the recent
references reported in the literature, the sample size
was predetermined by with a power analysis of 80.34%
which showed at least 43 patients to be sufficient.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using the IBM
SPSS for Windows version 22.0 software (IBM Corp.,
Armonk, NY, USA). Descriptive statistics were presented
in mean ± standard deviation (SD), and frequency
(percentage). Normal distribution of the variables was
tested by visual (histogram and probability graphs) and
analytical methods using the Shapiro-Wilk test. For
the evaluation of the statistical significance between
two independent groups, the Mann-Whitney U test was
used, while to assess the statistical significance between
two dependent groups, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test
was used. In case of more than two dependent groups,
the Friedman test was used for abnormally distributed
variables. In case of a statistically significant difference
between more than two dependent groups, post-hoc Bonferroni correction was used. The correlation
between variables was assessed using the Spearmans
correlation test. A p value of <0.05 was considered
statistically significant.
Table 1: Demographic, clinical and operative data of patients (n=54)
The correlation analysis revealed that neither right nor left hemisphere rSO2 values had a linear correlation with blood glucose levels (p=0.468, p=0.632; respectively). However, changes in the rSO2 values of each hemisphere were similar to each other (Table 3). There was no significant difference between pre- and postoperative MMSE scores of patients with and without DM (p>0.05) (Table 4).
Table 3: The correlation between blood glucose levels, right and left hemispheric rSO2 values (n=54)
Table 4: Mini-Mental State Examination values at pre- and postoperative period
Many pathological changes caused by hyperglycemia have been demonstrated in the small vessels, arteries, and peripheral nerves. Vascular endothelial cells are damaged by hyperglycemia, although the causative mechanisms have not been elucidated, yet.[17] Several authors have reported that hyperglycemia may lead to endothelial dysfunction and exacerbate tissue damage with cerebrovascular changes both during ischemia and reperfusion.[18,19]
In recent studies, a decline in the jugular bulb oxygen saturation during normothermic CPB was reported to be associated with postoperative short-term cognitive deficits in diabetic patients.[20,21] However, rSO2 and jugular bulb oxygen saturation is useful to measure different entities; therefore, expecting that they can be used interchangeably can be misleading. In diabetics, the pathway of nitric oxide is mostly affected and the cerebral endothelial function is altered extensively in CPB.[22] As a result, diabetic patients lose the normal coupling of cerebral blood flow with metabolism during CPB and usual cerebral blood flowperfusion pressure relationship. Thus, a direct effect of blood glucose level on cerebrovascular reserve may be out of the question. However, in case of vascular reactivity as in CPB, this effect can be a contributory factor.
Many studies have suggested that the normal coupling of cerebral blood flow with metabolism and usual cerebral blood flow-perfusion pressure relationship is lost in diabetic patients during CPB, resulting in cerebral desaturation, which is also reported to be closely related to postoperative neurological disorder.[23,24] This may be associated with the brain's being more susceptible to hypoxia than other organs. Nevertheless, the diabetic patients did not make any difference in the rSO2 v alues a nd postoperative neurological test scores from the nondiabetic ones in our study, probably due to our tight control of all factors playing a role in this aspect.
During cardiac surgery, the pre-bypass and early post-bypass periods are vulnerable times for the provision of adequate cerebral oxygenation due to blood-pressure instability. Our study demonstrated a gradual decline in rSO2 following the onset of CPB and at the time of aortic cross-clamping due to decreased mean arterial pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure. These time points also corresponded to increased blood glucose levels. However, we made interventions to avoid any increase in the blood glucose levels in this study. Besides, we kept the bispectral index between 40 and 60, assuming to keep the cerebral metabolic rate constant during surgery.
The preservation of cerebral oxygen saturation is a major concern in cardiac surgery.[6] Ellis et al.[25] demonstrated that various factors, such as hemoglobin concentrations, extra-cranial blood flow, and altered cerebral arterial to venous blood volume ratio, had an effect on the NIRS measurements. Hemodilution at the start of CPB also causes a decline in rSO2. Other critical times for desaturation are the low perfusion pressure and early rewarming stages. In addition, the temperature of CPB remains a subject of debate. Hypothermia reduces tissue metabolic demands, but may impair the autoregulation of cerebral blood flow and contribute to neurological morbidity. Some authors reported a worse neurological outcome of normothermic bypass (37 °C) compared to that of moderately hypothermic (32 °C) perfusion.[26,27] In the present study, a moderately hypothermic bypass was used.
In this study, we assessed the cognitive functions using the MMSE test which has been shown to be a valid and reliable method for its brevity and suitability for bedside use. The absence of a significant difference between pre- and postoperative MMSE values either in diabetics or non-diabetics; could be explained by prompt intraoperative interventions to preserve homeostasis. On the other side, after the surgery, the patients were followed intubated in ICU for four to six h; thus, we performed postoperative MMSE test at 24 h after surgery. Chen et al.[28] demonstrated the importance of timing of MMSE in the postoperative period after hip or knee arthroplasty. The authors found significant cognitive dysfunction in 51% of the patients at one hour after surgery, which disappeared in 85% of the patients at three hour after surgery. At 24 h after surgery, only one of 70 patients showed cognitive dysfunction. These results are consistent with our findings showing normal cognitive function at 24 h after surgery. However, more precise results and evaluations could have been made, if the patients were tested at earlier hours after anesthesia.
Nonetheless, there are some limitations to this study. A larger sample size with repeated cognitive function tests both in the early and long-term postoperative periods might confirm our results. Based on our results, we found no relationship between blood glucose levels and regional cerebral oxygen saturation as assessed by the near-infrared spectroscopy. Thus, as a secondary endpoint of this study, none of the patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass had unfavorable neurological outcomes.
In conclusion, changing trends of regional cerebral oxygenation dont reflect glycemic changes during CPB. In the present study, variables were kept strictly constant. Therefore, there is a need for further research in this aspect.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.
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