Effects of hypothermal and circulatory arrest on the auditory brainstem response during operation in children |
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Authors: | T Hayashi S Anegawa R Torigoe |
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Affiliation: | Department of Neurosurgery, St. Mary's Hospital, Kurume, Japan. |
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Abstract: | Twenty-two children were monitored by the auditory brainstem response (ABR) during the open chest and/or open heart surgery for cardiac anomalies under the extracorporeal circulation (ECC) with moderate to deep hypothermia. These patients were divided into two groups, namely, the ECC only group (group A: 9 cases) and the total circulatory arrest (TCA) group (group B: 13 cases). The mean age of group A was 36 months and group B was 6.1 months. In group A, moderate hypothermia was conducted with the rectal temperature ranging from 25 degrees C to 30 degrees C, and in group B profound hypothermia was conducted lowering the temperature to 18 degrees C. The ABR recorded at the following points, namely; before inducing anesthesia, before lowering the body temperatures, during the cooling process, at the time of TCA, and during the rewarming process. Accompanying the decrease in body temperature the peak latency of waves I, III and V were markedly prolonged. When the rectal temperature fell to 23 degrees C, the peak latency of each wave was prolonged to about 150% of their precooling values at 36 degrees C. When it fell to 22 degrees C, the ABR disappeared entirely in 16 of 22 cases, and in remaining 6 cases, only I wave was detected. During rewarming, in both the A and B groups, at 24 degrees C, the wave of ABR started to reappear beginning with I waves, and on reaching 26 degrees C, I, III and V waves from became detectable. The peak latency of all waves at rectal temperature of 33 degrees C recovered to almost the same values as these at 36 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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