Perioperative electroencephalography in cardiac surgery with hypothermic circulatory arrest: a narrative review

Author:

McDevitt William M1ORCID,Gul Tanwir23,Jones Timothy J34,Scholefield Barnaby R56ORCID,Seri Stefano17ORCID,Drury Nigel E34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children’s Hospital , Birmingham, UK

2. School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Birmingham , Birmingham, UK

3. Department of Paediatric Cardiac Surgery, Birmingham Children’s Hospital , Birmingham, UK

4. Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Birmingham , Birmingham, UK

5. Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, University of Birmingham , Birmingham, UK

6. Paediatric Intensive Care Unit, Birmingham Children’s Hospital , Birmingham, UK

7. College of Health and Life Sciences, Aston University , Birmingham, UK

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVES Cardiac surgery with hypothermic circulatory arrest (HCA) is associated with neurological morbidity of variable severity and electroencephalography (EEG) is a sensitive proxy measure of brain injury. We conducted a narrative review of the literature to evaluate the role of perioperative EEG monitoring in cardiac surgery involving HCA. METHODS Medline, Embase, Central and LILACS databases were searched to identify studies utilizing perioperative EEG during surgery with HCA in all age groups, published since 1985 in any language. We aimed to compare EEG use with no use but due to the lack of comparative studies, we performed a narrative review of its utility. Two or more reviewers independently screened studies for eligibility and extracted data. RESULTS Fourty single-centre studies with a total of 3287 patients undergoing surgery were identified. Most were observational cohort studies (34, 85%) with only 1 directly comparing EEG use with no use. EEG continuity (18, 45%), seizures (15, 38%) and electrocerebral inactivity prior to circulatory arrest (15, 38%) were used to detect, monitor, prevent and prognose neurological injury. Neurological dysfunction was reported in almost all studies and occurred in 0–21% of patients. However, the heterogeneity of reported clinical and EEG outcome measures prevented meta-analysis. CONCLUSIONS EEG is used to detect cortical ischaemia and seizures and predict neurological abnormalities and may guide intraoperative cerebral protection. However, there is a lack of comparative data demonstrating the benefit of perioperative EEG monitoring. Use of a standardized methodology for performing EEG and reporting outcome metrics would facilitate the conduct of high-quality clinical trials.

Funder

West Midlands Higher Education England Pre-Doctoral Bridging Programme

British Heart Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Surgery

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