Petit Christopher J, Rome Jonathan J, Wernovsky Gil, Mason Stefanie E, Shera David M, Nicolson Susan C, Montenegro Lisa M, Tabbutt Sarah, Zimmerman Robert A, Licht Daniel J
Division of Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pa, USA.
Circulation. 2009 Feb 10;119(5):709-16. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.760819. Epub 2009 Jan 26.
Preoperative brain injury is an increasingly recognized phenomenon in neonates with complex congenital heart disease. Recently, reports have been published that associate preoperative brain injury in neonates with transposition of the great arteries with the performance of balloon atrial septostomy (BAS), a procedure that improves systemic oxygenation preoperatively. It is unclear whether BAS is the cause of brain injury or is a confounder, because neonates who require BAS are typically more hypoxemic. We sought to determine the relationship between preoperative brain injury in neonates with transposition of the great arteries and the performance of BAS. We hypothesized that brain injury results from hypoxic injury, not from the BAS itself.
Infants with transposition of the great arteries (n=26) were retrospectively included from a larger cohort of infants with congenital heart disease who underwent preoperative brain MRI as part of 2 separate prospective studies. Data collected included all preoperative pulse oximetry recordings, all values from preoperative arterial blood gas measurements, and BAS procedure data. MRI scans were performed on the day of surgery, before the surgical repair. Of the 26 neonates, 14 underwent BAS. No stroke was seen in the entire cohort, whereas 10 (38%) of 26 patients were found to have hypoxic brain injury in the form of periventricular leukomalacia. Periventricular leukomalacia was not associated with BAS; however, neonates with periventricular leukomalacia had lower preoperative oxygenation (P=0.026) and a longer time to surgery (P=0.028) than those without periventricular leukomalacia.
Preoperative brain injury in neonates with transposition of the great arteries is associated with hypoxemia and longer time to surgery. We found no association between BAS and brain injury.
术前脑损伤在患有复杂先天性心脏病的新生儿中是一种日益被认识到的现象。最近,已有报道将患有大动脉转位的新生儿术前脑损伤与球囊房间隔造口术(BAS)的实施联系起来,该手术可在术前改善全身氧合。目前尚不清楚BAS是脑损伤的原因还是一个混杂因素,因为需要BAS的新生儿通常缺氧更严重。我们试图确定患有大动脉转位的新生儿术前脑损伤与BAS实施之间的关系。我们假设脑损伤是由缺氧损伤导致的,而非BAS本身。
从一个更大的先天性心脏病婴儿队列中回顾性纳入了患有大动脉转位的婴儿(n = 26),这些婴儿作为两项独立前瞻性研究的一部分接受了术前脑MRI检查。收集的数据包括所有术前脉搏血氧饱和度记录、术前动脉血气测量的所有值以及BAS手术数据。MRI扫描在手术当天、手术修复前进行。在这26例新生儿中,14例接受了BAS。整个队列中未发现中风病例,而26例患者中有10例(38%)被发现有以脑室周围白质软化形式存在的缺氧性脑损伤。脑室周围白质软化与BAS无关;然而,患有脑室周围白质软化的新生儿术前氧合水平较低(P = 0.026),且手术时间比没有脑室周围白质软化的新生儿更长(P = 0.028)。
患有大动脉转位的新生儿术前脑损伤与低氧血症和较长的手术时间有关。我们未发现BAS与脑损伤之间存在关联。