Kearse L A, Lopez-Bresnahan M, McPeck K, Zaslavsky A
Department of Anesthesia, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02114, USA.
Stroke. 1995 Jul;26(7):1210-4. doi: 10.1161/01.str.26.7.1210.
The purpose of this prospective study was to establish (1) whether patients with neurological symptoms scheduled for carotid endarterectomy had an increased incidence of electroencephalographic (EEG) abnormalities during awake baseline recordings, (2) whether these symptoms and EEG abnormalities predicted ischemic EEG pattern changes at carotid artery cross-clamp, and (3) whether there was an association between age, presence of EEG baseline abnormalities, and ischemic pattern changes at carotid artery cross-clamp.
We reviewed the medical record of each patient scheduled to undergo carotid endarterectomy and recorded the patient's age and history of previous neurological symptoms. We then continuously monitored and analyzed 16 channels of anteroposterior bipolar EEG and two of referential derivations from at least 5 minutes before induction of anesthesia and throughout the operation.
We completed 394 consecutive studies. Preoperative neurological symptoms were related to EEG abnormalities in awake patients (P < .001) and to EEG asymmetries in anesthetized patients (P < .001). Abnormal awake EEG findings were associated with asymmetries after anesthesia (P < .0001). Twenty-eight percent of both symptomatic (70/249) and asymptomatic (41/145) patients had EEG ischemic pattern changes at carotid artery cross-clamp. Neither neurological symptoms nor EEG abnormalities were associated with age or the development of EEG ischemic pattern changes at carotid artery cross-clamp.
Despite the strong association between a history of cerebral ischemic symptoms and preoperative EEG abnormalities in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy, patients who have suffered strokes or transient ischemic events are at no greater risk of having EEG evidence of cerebral ischemia during carotid artery cross-clamp than patients without symptoms and with normal baseline EEGs. We conclude that preoperative EEG abnormalities in symptomatic patients are not due to age or to insufficiency of regional cerebral blood flow.
本前瞻性研究的目的是确定:(1)计划接受颈动脉内膜切除术的有神经症状的患者在清醒基线记录期间脑电图(EEG)异常的发生率是否增加;(2)这些症状和EEG异常是否能预测颈动脉夹闭时缺血性EEG模式变化;(3)年龄、EEG基线异常的存在与颈动脉夹闭时缺血性模式变化之间是否存在关联。
我们回顾了每位计划接受颈动脉内膜切除术患者的病历,并记录患者的年龄和既往神经症状史。然后,在麻醉诱导前至少5分钟直至整个手术过程中,持续监测并分析16通道的前后双极EEG以及两个参考导联。
我们连续完成了394项研究。术前神经症状与清醒患者的EEG异常相关(P <.001),与麻醉患者的EEG不对称相关(P <.001)。清醒时EEG异常发现与麻醉后不对称相关(P <.0001)。有症状(70/249)和无症状(41/145)患者中均有28%在颈动脉夹闭时有EEG缺血性模式变化。神经症状和EEG异常均与年龄或颈动脉夹闭时EEG缺血性模式变化的发生无关。
尽管在接受颈动脉内膜切除术的患者中,脑缺血症状史与术前EEG异常之间存在密切关联,但与无症状且基线EEG正常的患者相比,曾发生中风或短暂性缺血事件的患者在颈动脉夹闭期间出现脑缺血EEG证据的风险并不更高。我们得出结论,有症状患者术前的EEG异常并非由于年龄或局部脑血流不足所致。