Wilder Robert T, Flick Randall P, Sprung Juraj, Katusic Slavica K, Barbaresi William J, Mickelson Christopher, Gleich Stephen J, Schroeder Darrell R, Weaver Amy L, Warner David O
Department of Anesthesiology, College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2009 Apr;110(4):796-804. doi: 10.1097/01.anes.0000344728.34332.5d.
Anesthetic drugs administered to immature animals may cause neurohistopathologic changes and alterations in behavior. The authors studied association between anesthetic exposure before age 4 yr and the development of reading, written language, and math learning disabilities (LD).
This was a population-based, retrospective birth cohort study. The educational and medical records of all children born to mothers residing in five townships of Olmsted County, Minnesota, from 1976 to 1982 and who remained in the community at 5 yr of age were reviewed to identify children with LD. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to calculate hazard ratios for anesthetic exposure as a predictor of LD, adjusting for gestational age at birth, sex, and birth weight.
Of the 5,357 children in this cohort, 593 received general anesthesia before age 4 yr. Compared with those not receiving anesthesia (n = 4,764), a single exposure to anesthesia (n = 449) was not associated with an increased risk of LD (hazard ratio = 1.0; 95% confidence interval, 0.79-1.27). However, children receiving two anesthetics (n = 100) or three or more anesthetics (n = 44) were at increased risk for LD (hazard ratio = 1.59; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-2.37, and hazard ratio = 2.60; 95% confidence interval, 1.60-4.24, respectively). The risk for LD increased with longer cumulative duration of anesthesia exposure (expressed as a continuous variable) (P = 0.016).
Exposure to anesthesia was a significant risk factor for the later development of LD in children receiving multiple, but not single anesthetics. These data cannot reveal whether anesthesia itself may contribute to LD or whether the need for anesthesia is a marker for other unidentified factors that contribute to LD.
给予未成熟动物的麻醉药物可能会引起神经组织病理学变化和行为改变。作者研究了4岁前接受麻醉与阅读、书写语言和数学学习障碍(LD)发生之间的关联。
这是一项基于人群的回顾性出生队列研究。对1976年至1982年居住在明尼苏达州奥尔姆斯特德县五个乡镇的母亲所生且5岁时仍留在社区的所有儿童的教育和医疗记录进行审查,以确定患有LD的儿童。采用Cox比例风险回归分析计算麻醉暴露作为LD预测因素的风险比,并对出生时的孕周、性别和出生体重进行校正。
该队列中的5357名儿童中,593名在4岁前接受了全身麻醉。与未接受麻醉的儿童(n = 4764)相比,单次麻醉暴露(n = 449)与LD风险增加无关(风险比 = 1.0;95%置信区间,0.79 - 1.27)。然而,接受两次麻醉(n = 100)或三次及以上麻醉(n = 44)的儿童发生LD的风险增加(风险比分别为1.59;95%置信区间,1.06 - 2.37和风险比 = 2.60;95%置信区间,1.60 - 4.24)。LD风险随着麻醉暴露累积持续时间延长(以连续变量表示)而增加(P = 0.016)。
对于接受多次而非单次麻醉的儿童,麻醉暴露是后期发生LD的重要风险因素。这些数据无法揭示麻醉本身是否可能导致LD,或者麻醉需求是否是导致LD的其他未明确因素的标志。