Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest: I. Effects of cooling on electroencephalogram and evoked potentials 36th Annual Meeting of the Society-of-Thoracic-Surgeons Stecker, M. M., Cheung, A. T., Pochettino, A., Kent, G. P., Patterson, T., Weiss, S. J., Bavaria, J. E. ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC. 2001: 14–21

Abstract

Deep hypothermia is an important cerebral protectant and is critical in procedures requiring circulatory arrest. The purpose of this study was to determine the factors that influence the neurophysiologic changes during cooling before circulatory arrest, in particular the occurrence of electrocerebral silence.In 109 patients undergoing hypothermic circulatory arrest with neurophysiologic monitoring, five electrophysiologic events were selected for detailed study.The mean nasopharyngeal temperature when periodic complexes appeared in the electroencephalogram after cooling was 29.6 degrees C +/- 3 degrees C, electroencephalogram burst-suppression appeared at 24.4 degrees C +/- 4 degrees C, and electrocerebral silence appeared at 17.8 degrees C +/- 4 degrees C. The N20-P22 complex of the somatosensory evoked response disappeared at 21.4 degrees C +/- 4 degrees C, and the somatosensory evoked response N13 wave disappeared at 17.3 degrees C +/- 4 degrees C. The temperatures of these various events were not significantly affected by any patient-specific or surgical variables, although the time to cool to electrocerebral silence was prolonged by high hemoglobin concentrations, low arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide, and by slow cooling rates. Only 60% of patients demonstrated electrocerebral silence by either a nasopharyngeal temperature of 18 degrees C or a cooling time of 30 minutes.With the high degree of interpatient variability in these neurophysiologic measures, the only absolute predictors of electrocerebral silence were nasopharyngeal temperature below 12.5 degrees C and cooling longer than 50 minutes.

View details for Web of Science ID 000166457600003

View details for PubMedID 11216734