Do Indomethacin and Propofol Cause Cerebral Ischemic Damage?

Author:

Rasmussen Mads1,Østergaard Leif2,Juul Niels3,Gyldensted Carsten4,Poulsen Peter V.2,Cold Georg E.5

Affiliation:

1. Research Fellow, Department of Neuroanesthesia, Århus University Hospital and Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Viborg County Hospital, Viborg, Denmark.

2. Associate Professor.

3. Staff Anesthesiologist, Department of Neuroanesthesia, Århus University Hospital. Associate Professor, Department of Neuroradiology, and

4. Professor, Department of Neuroradiology.

5. Assistant Professor, Department of Neuroanesthesia, Århus University Hospital.

Abstract

Background Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging was used to determine whether indomethacin and propofol induce cerebral ischemic damage in patients undergoing craniotomy for cerebral tumors. As a secondary aim, the authors investigated whether low jugular bulb oxygen saturation values were associated with brain parenchymal damage as evaluated by diffusion-weighted imaging. Methods Nine patients subjected to craniotomy for supratentorial brain tumors in propofol-fentanyl anesthesia were studied. Magnetic resonance imaging including diffusion- and perfusion-weighted and structural sequences were performed (1) on the day before surgery, (2) before and (3) 20 min after administration of indomethacin (bolus of 0.2 mg/kg followed by infusion of 0.2 mg.kg.h) in the propofol-fentanyl-anesthetized patient, and (4) 2 days after surgery. Apparent diffusion coefficient maps were calculated. Jugular bulb oxygen saturation, arteriovenous oxygen difference, mean arterial blood pressure, and arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide tensions were measured simultaneously with the magnetic resonance examinations performed during anesthesia. Results No ischemic lesions were detected in the diffusion-weighted or apparent diffusion coefficient images. A nonsignificant decrease in jugular bulb oxygen saturation from 51% (range, 40-61%) to 43% (range, 37-63%) and increase in arteriovenous oxygen difference from 4.4 mm (range, 2.7-4.6 mm) to 4.7 mm (range, 2.9-5.2 mm) was observed after indomethacin administration. Conclusion Administration of indomethacin during propofol anesthesia is not associated with evidence of ischemic damage in patients with brain tumors, as evaluated by diffusion-weighted imaging.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference36 articles.

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