Prevention of postoperative stroke in pediatric moyamoya patients: a standardized perioperative care protocol

Author:

Judge Jennifer1,Kappel Ari D.12,Isibor Christopher1,O’Hara Jill E.3,Larson Anna3,Kleinman Monica3,See Alfred P.1,Lehman Laura L.4,Smith Edward R.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurosurgery

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

3. Anesthesiology, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine; and

4. Neurology, Boston Children’s Hospital; and

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Perioperative stroke is a major complication of revascularization surgery in patients with moyamoya. Vomiting is common after neurosurgical procedures and may result in acute changes in intracranial pressure and cerebral blood flow. The authors instituted a standardized perioperative nausea and vomiting protocol for children with moyamoya undergoing indirect bypass surgery at their institution and analyzed its association with perioperative stroke. They hypothesized that instituting a standardized perioperative nausea and vomiting protocol would be associated with reduction in the number of perioperative strokes in children with moyamoya undergoing indirect bypass surgery. METHODS The authors retrospectively reviewed consecutive cases of children and young adults with moyamoya who underwent indirect bypass surgery before and after implementation of a new perioperative nausea and vomiting protocol at a single institution. They compared the rate of strokes in the perioperative period (postoperative days 0 and 1) in the 31 months following implementation to 31 months prior to implementation using Fisher’s exact test. RESULTS The median ages pre- and postimplementation were 8.5 (IQR 4–12) years and 8.3 (IQR 5–15) years, respectively. There were no significant differences between the cohorts in disease severity or other potentially confounding factors. In the 31 months prior to initiation of the perioperative nausea and vomiting protocol, there were 5 strokes in 137 surgically treated hemispheres (3.6%). After initiation of the protocol, there were no strokes in 114 surgically treated hemispheres (p = 0.065). CONCLUSIONS Instituting a standardized perioperative nausea and vomiting protocol was associated with reduction in perioperative strokes in children with moyamoya treated with indirect bypass surgery.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference11 articles.

1. Surgical management of moyamoya syndrome;Smith ER,2005

2. Long-term outcome in children with moyamoya syndrome after cranial revascularization by pial synangiosis;Scott RM,2004

3. Clinical status and evolution in moyamoya: which angiographic findings correlate?;Rosi A,2019

4. Risk factors for and outcomes of postoperative complications in adult patients with moyamoya disease;Zhao M,2019

5. Pial synangiosis in patients with moyamoya younger than 2 years of age;Jackson EM,2014

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