Processed intraoperative burst suppression and postoperative cognitive dysfunction in a cohort of older noncardiac surgery patients

被引:0
作者
M. Dustin Boone
Hung-Mo Lin
Xiaoyu Liu
Jong Kim
Mary Sano
Mark G. Baxter
Frederick E. Sieber
Stacie G. Deiner
机构
[1] Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center,Department of Anesthesiology
[2] Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Medical Education Program
[3] Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Department of Population Health Science and Policy
[4] James J. Peters VA Medical Center,Department of Neuroscience
[5] The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Department of Anesthesiology
[6] The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,Department of Anesthesiology
[7] Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center,Department of Psychiatry, Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center
[8] Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,undefined
来源
Journal of Clinical Monitoring and Computing | 2022年 / 36卷
关键词
Anesthesia; Geriatrics; Electroencephalogram; Burst suppression; Surgery; Cognition;
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学科分类号
摘要
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a decline in cognitive test performance which persists months after surgery. There has been great interest in the anesthesia community regarding whether variables generated by commercially available processed EEG monitors originally marketed to prevent awareness under anesthesia can be used to guide intraoperative anesthetic management to prevent POCD. Processed EEG monitors represent an opportunity for anesthesiologists to directly monitor the brain even if they have not been trained to interpret EEG waveforms. There is continued equipoise regarding whether any of the variables generated by the machines’ interpretation of raw data are associated with POCD. Most literature has focused on the depth of anesthesia number, however recent studies have shown that processed depth may not be accurate in older age groups due to reduced alpha band power. Burst suppression is an encephalographic pattern of high voltage activity alternating with periods of electrical silence and is another marker of depth which can be obtained from commercial processed EEG monitors. We performed a prospective cohort study to determine whether burst suppression and burst suppression ratio as measured by the BIS Monitor (Bispectral Index, BIS Medtronic, Boulder CO), is associated with cognitive dysfunction 3 months after surgery. We recruited 167 elective surgery patients, 65 years of age and older, anticipated to require at least 2 day inpatient admission. Our main outcome measure was cognitive decline in composite z-score on the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center UDS Battery of at least 1 standard deviation 3 months after surgery relative to preoperative baseline. 14% experienced POCD, this group was older (72 [70, 74] versus 70 [67, 75] years), and had frailty scores as measured by the FRAIL Scale (2 [0, 3] versus 1 [0, 2]) and lower baseline z-scores (− 0.2 [− 0.6, 0.5] versus 0.1 [− 0.3, 0.5]). There was a univariable association between suppression ratio > 10 (SR > 10) and POCD (4.8 [0, 37.3] versus 15.4 [4.0–142.4] min), p = .038. However, after adjustment this relationship did not persist, only anesthetic technique, age, and pain remained in the model. In our cohort of older elective noncardiac surgery patients we found a marginal association between processed burst suppression (total burst suppression p = .067, SR > 5 p = .052, SR > 10.038) which did not persist in a multivariable model. Patients with POCD had almost twice the number of minutes of burst suppression, and three times the amount of time for SR > 5 and > 10. Our finding may be a limitation of the monitor’s ability to detect burst suppression. The consistent trend towards more intraoperative burst suppression in patients who developed POCD suggests that future studies are needed to investigate the relationship of raw intraoperative burst suppression and POCD.
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页码:1433 / 1440
页数:7
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