NEUROLOGIC DEFICITS FOLLOWING NONCAROTID VASCULAR-SURGERY 78TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE NORTH PACIFIC SURGICAL ASSOC Harris, E. J., Moneta, G. L., Yeager, R. A., Taylor, L. M., Porter, J. M. CAHNERS PUBL CO. 1992: 537–40

Abstract

Neurologic events following noncarotid vascular surgery (NCVS) are considered unpredictable. To test this hypothesis, we reviewed our vascular registry for a 3-year period and identified all patients with new postoperative focal neurologic events (stroke, hemispheric transient ischemic attack [TIA]) within 2 weeks of a category I or II vascular procedure as defined by the American Board of Surgery, exclusive of carotid surgery and arterial trauma. Thirteen of 1,390 NCVS procedures (0.9%) in 13 patients were associated with focal neurologic events. There were 2 TIAs, 10 anterior circulation strokes, and 1 posterior circulation stroke. Twenty-seven percent of strokes were fatal. The neurologic deficit developed in the immediate postoperative period in 31%, more than 4 hours but less than 72 hours postoperatively in 54%, and within 3 to 14 days postoperatively in 15%. Patients with anterior circulation events (group A, n = 12) were compared for variables potentially influencing postoperative stroke with case controls who were selected using a table of random numbers (group B, n = 12). Controls were derived from a pool of all category I or II NCVS procedures recorded in our vascular registry sequentially during the same time period and who were without new neurologic deficits postoperatively. Using Fisher's exact test, comparisons between groups A and B revealed that new anterior circulation neurologic events in vascular surgical patients tended to be associated with intra-abdominal procedures (p less than 0.05), perioperative hypotension (p less than 0.05), and the presence of a greater than or equal to 50% internal carotid artery stenosis ipsilateral to the neurologic event (p less than 0.001). Such information may prove useful in the management of selected patients prior to arterial reconstruction and in operated NCVS patients with postoperative neurologic events.

View details for PubMedID 1575315