Hu Danqing, Flick Randall P, Zaccariello Michael J, Colligan Robert C, Katusic Slavica K, Schroeder Darrell R, Hanson Andrew C, Buenvenida Shonie L, Gleich Stephen J, Wilder Robert T, Sprung Juraj, Warner David O
From the Departments of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine (D.H., R.P.F., S.L.B., S.J.G., R.T.W., J.S., D.O.W.), Psychology (M.J.Z., R.C.C.), and Health Sciences Research (S.K.K., D.R.S., A.C.H.), Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
Anesthesiology. 2017 Aug;127(2):227-240. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000001735.
Exposure of young animals to general anesthesia causes neurodegeneration and lasting behavioral abnormalities; whether these findings translate to children remains unclear. This study used a population-based birth cohort to test the hypothesis that multiple, but not single, exposures to procedures requiring general anesthesia before age 3 yr are associated with adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes.
A retrospective study cohort was assembled from children born in Olmsted County, Minnesota, from 1996 to 2000 (inclusive). Propensity matching selected children exposed and not exposed to general anesthesia before age 3 yr. Outcomes ascertained via medical and school records included learning disabilities, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and group-administered ability and achievement tests. Analysis methods included proportional hazard regression models and mixed linear models.
For the 116 multiply exposed, 457 singly exposed, and 463 unexposed children analyzed, multiple, but not single, exposures were associated with an increased frequency of both learning disabilities and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (hazard ratio for learning disabilities = 2.17 [95% CI, 1.32 to 3.59], unexposed as reference). Multiple exposures were associated with decreases in both cognitive ability and academic achievement. Single exposures were associated with modest decreases in reading and language achievement but not cognitive ability.
These findings in children anesthetized with modern techniques largely confirm those found in an older birth cohort and provide additional evidence that children with multiple exposures are more likely to develop adverse outcomes related to learning and attention. Although a robust association was observed, these data do not determine whether anesthesia per se is causal.
幼龄动物接受全身麻醉会导致神经退行性变和持久的行为异常;这些发现是否适用于儿童尚不清楚。本研究使用基于人群的出生队列来检验这一假设,即3岁前多次(而非单次)接受需要全身麻醉的手术与不良神经发育结局相关。
回顾性研究队列由1996年至2000年(含)在明尼苏达州奥尔姆斯特德县出生的儿童组成。倾向匹配法选择3岁前接受和未接受全身麻醉的儿童。通过医疗和学校记录确定的结局包括学习障碍、注意力缺陷多动障碍以及团体施测的能力和成就测试。分析方法包括比例风险回归模型和混合线性模型。
在分析的116名多次暴露、457名单次暴露和463名未暴露儿童中,多次暴露(而非单次暴露)与学习障碍和注意力缺陷多动障碍的发生率增加相关(学习障碍的风险比=2.17 [95% CI,1.32至3.59],以未暴露儿童为参照)。多次暴露与认知能力和学业成绩下降相关。单次暴露与阅读和语言成绩适度下降相关,但与认知能力无关。
这些在接受现代技术麻醉的儿童中的发现很大程度上证实了在一个较早出生队列中的发现,并提供了额外证据,表明多次暴露的儿童更有可能出现与学习和注意力相关的不良结局。尽管观察到了强烈的关联,但这些数据并未确定麻醉本身是否具有因果关系。