An International, Multicenter, Observational Study of Cerebral Oxygenation during Infant and Neonatal Anesthesia

Author:

Olbrecht Vanessa A.1,Skowno Justin1,Marchesini Vanessa1,Ding Lili1,Jiang Yifei1,Ward Christopher G.1,Yu Gaofeng1,Liu Huacheng1,Schurink Bernadette1,Vutskits Laszlo1,de Graaff Jurgen C.1,McGowan Francis X.1,von Ungern-Sternberg Britta S.1,Kurth Charles Dean1,Davidson Andrew1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Anesthesiology (V.A.O., Y.J.) and Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology (L.D.), Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Department of Anaesthesia, Children’s Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (J.S.); Discipline of Child and Adolescent Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (J.S.); Anaesthesia and

Abstract

Abstract Background General anesthesia during infancy is associated with neurocognitive abnormalities. Potential mechanisms include anesthetic neurotoxicity, surgical disease, and cerebral hypoxia–ischemia. This study aimed to determine the incidence of low cerebral oxygenation and associated factors during general anesthesia in infants. Methods This multicenter study enrolled 453 infants aged less than 6 months having general anesthesia for 30 min or more. Regional cerebral oxygenation was measured by near-infrared spectroscopy. We defined events (more than 3 min) for low cerebral oxygenation as mild (60 to 69% or 11 to 20% below baseline), moderate (50 to 59% or 21 to 30% below baseline), or severe (less than 50% or more than 30% below baseline); for low mean arterial pressure as mild (36 to 45 mmHg), moderate (26 to 35 mmHg), or severe (less than 25 mmHg); and low pulse oximetry saturation as mild (80 to 89%), moderate (70 to 79%), or severe (less than 70%). Results The incidences of mild, moderate, and severe low cerebral oxygenation were 43%, 11%, and 2%, respectively; mild, moderate, and severe low mean arterial pressure were 62%, 36%, and 13%, respectively; and mild, moderate, and severe low arterial saturation were 15%, 4%, and 2%, respectively. Severe low oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry was associated with mild and moderate cerebral desaturation; American Society of Anesthesiology Physical Status III or IV versus I was associated with moderate cerebral desaturation. Severe low cerebral saturation events were too infrequent to analyze. Conclusions Mild and moderate low cerebral saturation occurred frequently, whereas severe low cerebral saturation was uncommon. Low mean arterial pressure was common and not well associated with low cerebral saturation. Unrecognized severe desaturation lasting 3 min or longer in infants seems unlikely to explain the subsequent development of neurocognitive abnormalities.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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