CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
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Limitations of Current Near-Infrared Spectroscopy Configuration in Detecting Focal Cerebral Ischemia During Cardiac Surgery: An Observational Case-Series Study.

Artificial Organs 2018 October
Cerebral oximetry using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) allows for continuous monitoring of cerebral perfusion and immediate treatment of hemodynamic perturbations. In configurations used in current clinical practice, NIRS optodes are placed on the patient`s forehead and cerebral oxygen saturation (ScO2 ) is determined in bilateral frontal cortical samples. However, focal cerebral ischemic lesions outside of the NIRS field of view may remain undetected. The objective of this observational case-series study was to investigate ScO2 measurements in patients with acute iatrogenic stroke not located in the frontal cortical region. Adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass or interventional cardiology procedures and suffering stroke in the early postoperative period were identified from the Bernese Stroke Registry and analyzed for their intraoperative ScO2 values and brain imaging data. Main outcome measures were the ScO2 values, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings. In six patients, the infarct areas were localized in the vascular territories of the posterior and/or dorsal middle cerebral arteries. One patient had watershed stroke and another one excellent collaterals resulting in normal cerebral blood volume and only subtle decrease of cerebral blood flow in initially critically perfused watershed brain areas. Intraoperative ScO2 values were entirely unremarkable or nonindicative for brain damage. Our results indicate that uneventful intraoperative NIRS monitoring does not exclude severe cerebral ischemia due to the limited field of view of commercially available NIRS devices. False negative NIRS may occur as a consequence of stroke localized outside the frontal cortex.

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