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Brain Damage After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting
Martin Bendszus, MD;
Wilko Reents, MD;
Dorothea Franke, MD;
Wolfgang Müllges, MD;
Jörg Babin-Ebell, MD;
Martin Koltzenburg, MD;
Monika Warmuth-Metz, MD;
Laszlo Solymosi, MD
Arch Neurol. 2002;59:1090-1095.
ABSTRACT
Background Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is associated with a risk for
focal neurological deficits and neuropsychological impairment postoperatively.
Objectives To examine the brain damage after CABG using diffusion-weighted magnetic
resonance imaging and 1H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS)
and to correlate the results with neurological and neuropsychological findings.
Patients and Methods Thirty-five consecutive patients undergoing elective CABG were included.
Patients underwent a neurological and neuropsychological examination before
and after CABG. The magnetic resonance protocol was applied before and after
(mean, 3 days) surgery and included a diffusion-weighted sequence and single-voxel
MRS measurements in the frontal lobes.
Results None of the patients revealed a new focal neurological deficit after
surgery. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated new ischemic
lesions in 9 (26%) of the patients. The presence of an ischemic lesion was
not related to impaired postoperative test performance (P>.50). The apparent diffusion coefficient values in the cerebellum
and the centrum semiovale exhibited an increase after surgery (P<.01), consistent with vasogenic edema. Following surgery, MRS
revealed a significant decrease in the metabolite ratio of N-acetylaspartatecreatine (mean ± SD, 1.69 ± 0.20
vs 1.52 ± 0.19; P<.001). The extent of
deterioration in neuropsychological test performance after surgery was closely
related to the degree of the N-acetylaspartatecreatine
ratio decrease (P<.01). A follow-up MRS scan revealed
a normalization of the N-acetylaspartatecreatine
ratio, which accompanied the recovery in psychological test performance.
Conclusions Postoperative impairment in neuropsychological test performance is associated
with a transient metabolic neuronal disturbance. Focal ischemic lesions after
CABG are more frequent than the apparent neurological complication rate; however,
they are not related to the diffuse postoperative encephalopathy.
INTRODUCTION
CORONARY ARTERY bypass grafting (CABG) is associated with a risk for
neurological complications. The overall incidence of serious focal neurological
complications, such as stroke or transient ischemic attacks, has been reported
to be 3% to 5%.1-3
In a subgroup of high-risk patients, severe postoperative neurological complications
can be as high as 8.4%.4 Subtle, but detectable,
postoperative changes in cognitive function are considered even more frequent.3 For the assessment of the neurological damage following
CABG, several techniques have been evaluated, including quantitative electroencephalography,5 measurements of the S100 protein,6
auditory-evoked potentials,7 transcranial Doppler
ultrasonography,8 and magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI).5, 7, 9-11
Diffusion-weighted (DW) MRI and 1H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy
(MRS) are new magnetic resonance techniques that, to our knowledge, have not
been systematically used to study patients after CABG. Diffusion-weighted
MRI allows for sensitive and early detection of cerebral ischemia within minutes
of onset.12-13 Diffusion-weighted
MRI can detect a significant proportion of focal ischemic brain damage in
patients with an unchanged neurological examination result.14
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy allows for a limited in vivo assessment of
cerebral metabolism.15 We aimed to prospectively
evaluate brain damage following CABG using DW-MRI and MRS and to correlate
the findings with clinical and neuropsychological data.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
PATIENTS
Thirty-five consecutive patients undergoing elective CABG with cardiopulmonary
bypass without magnetic resonance contraindication or a major psychiatric
or neurological disease were included in this prospective study. Only patients
without an increased perioperative risk (as outlined by McKhann et al16) were selected to avoid dropouts during early postoperative
testing. Thus, this was a positive patient selection without prior stroke,
with normal carotid Doppler findings, without a severely depressed left ventricular
function (ejection fraction, <35%), with medically controlled hypertension
and diabetes mellitus, and younger than 70 years.
Informed written consent was obtained from all participants. The study
was approved by the local ethics committee. The characteristics of the patients
are shown in Table 1.
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Data of Patients With and Without a New Lesion on DW-MRI Following
CABG*
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ANESTHESIA AND SURGERY
Cardiopulmonary bypassassisted surgery was performed with standard
anesthesia techniques and surgical procedures. For general anesthesia, a combination
of midazolam hydrochloride, fentanyl citrate, and vecuronium bromide was used.
After a median sternotomy, left mammary artery and/or saphenous grafts were
used. The procedures were performed under moderate hypothermia (32°C),
using a nonpulsatile pump flow of 2.4 L/m2 per minute at maximal
pump force, a membrane oxygenator, and 40-µm membrane filters. Anticoagulation
was adjusted at an activated clotting time of longer than 400 seconds. Mean
arterial pressure was maintained at 60 mm Hg or higher. Bypass graftings (range,
2-5; mean, 3.8) were performed within a bypass time of 68 to 222 minutes (mean
± SD, 129 ± 37 minutes) and an aortic cross-clamp time of 37
to 105 minutes (mean ± SD, 78 ± 21 minutes). The mean ±
SD overall operation time was 256 ± 46 minutes. Following the day after
surgery, the patients did not receive opioids or sedative medication.
CLINICAL EVALUATION
The clinical examination was performed 2 days before and on days 1,
3, and 9 after surgery. For all subjects, it was performed by the same neurologist
(W.M.) and included the medical history, a physical examination, and a detailed
neurological examination.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL EVALUATION
The neuropsychological test battery included the following tests: d2-letter
cancellation test (examining sustained concentration and attention18); Benton19 visual
retention test, instruction A (testing visual short-term memory and visuomotor
abilities); Reitan trail-making test A (assessing attention, psychomotor tracking
speed, and hand-eye coordination20); and the
block design test from the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (testing clumsiness
and visuospatial and constructive abilities21).
The tests were performed by the same neurologist (W.M.) and applied 2 days
before surgery and on days 3, 6, and 9 after surgery.
DW-MRI AND 1H-MRS
All measurements were performed on a 1.5-T device (Magnetom Vision;
Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany). The protocol was applied 1 to 3 days before
surgery (median, 2 days) and repeated on days 3 to 5 (median, day 3) after
surgery. The MRI scan included an axial T2-weighted double-echo spin-echo
sequence (repetition time, 2000 ms; echo time, 20/80 milliseconds; and slice
thickness, 6 mm) and an axial DW sequence (using echoplanar imaging) (orthogonal
axis DW images: b = 0, 500, and 1000 s/mm2; repetition time, 5400
milliseconds; echo time, 103 milliseconds; and slice thickness, 6 mm). Apparent
diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps were calculated for every slice, and mean
ADC values were bilaterally determined in a round region of interest (4 mm
in diameter) in the cerebellar hemispheres, thalamus, and supraventricular
white matter of the hemispheres.
The MRS protocol consisted of a single-voxel point resolved spectroscopy
sequence (repetition time, 1500 ms; echo time, 135 ms; 128 acquisitions; and
voxel size, 40 x 30 x 20 mm) bifrontally. To achieve a reproducible
position, the voxel was placed on a midsagittal image with its inferior edge
at the callosomarginal sulcus and on an axial image with its posterior edge
at the central sulcus. The voxel position and representative spectra are shown
in Figure 1.
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Figure 1. A, An axial T2-weighted localizer
image demonstrating the position of the frontal voxel. Representative preoperative
(B) and postoperative (C) spectra demonstrate a decline of the NAA/Cr ratio
3 days postoperatively (preoperatively: NAA/Cr ratio, 1.9; Cho/Cr ratio, 0.64;
postoperatively: NAA/Cr ratio, 1.3; Cho/Cr ratio, 0.62). This patient revealed
a marked decline on test performance for each test on the third postoperative
day. NAA indicates N-acetylaspartate; Cr, creatine;
and Cho, choline.
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DATA ANALYSIS
Analysis of MRI and MRS data was performed blinded to the clinical and
neuropsychological data and to the time of the examination (presurgery or
postsurgery). Two neuroradiologists (M.W.-M. and L.S.) independently evaluated
the MRI scans for diffusion abnormalities on DW images and preexisting vascular
abnormalities and brain atrophy on T2- and proton-densityweighted images.17
Spectral postprocessing was performed on a workstation using software
provided by the manufacturer (Luise; Siemens AG) and included 4k-space zero
filling, gaussian apodization, Fourier transformation, water reference processing,
and frequency shift, phase, and baseline corrections. Peak integral values
were determined by a fit-curve algorithm at 3.0 ppm for creatine (Cr), 3.2
ppm for choline-containing compounds, 1.35 ppm for lactate, and 2.0 ppm for N-acetylaspartate (NAA). Peak integral values were normalized
to the internal Cr peak.
All statistical analyses were performed with a statistical software
package (Statistical Product and Service Solutions, version 9.0; SPSS Inc,
Chicago, Ill). Differences were considered to be statistically significant
at P<.05. Metabolite ratios were tested for normal
distribution with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. Based on an acceptable normal
distribution, differences between the preoperative and postoperative values
were analyzed with the t test for paired observations.
Correlation between metabolic and surgical data (operation, bypass, and aortic
cross-clamp times) was assessed using the Pearson product moment coefficient.
To assess the neuropsychological impairment after surgery, the differences
between preoperative and postoperative values were calculated for each test,
and a median split was performed to separate patients with a more severe or
a less severe psychological deterioration after surgery. Both groups were
tested for significant differences in metabolic data, lesions on DW images,
and preexisting vascular damage on T2-weighted images using either a nonpaired t test or a Wilcoxon signed rank test. The group of patients
with lesions on DW-MRI was compared with the group of patients without lesions
concerning metabolic and surgical data and preexisting vascular damage using
a nonpaired t test or a Wilcoxon signed rank test
after fulfillment of appropriate prerequisites. Data are given as mean ±
SD unless otherwise indicated.
RESULTS
CLINICAL OUTCOME
No patient experienced a perioperative stroke, postoperative epileptic
seizures, relevant surgical complications, or postoperative delirium. However,
the whole patient group experienced a transient decline of test performance
in each test on the third postoperative day compared with baseline (P<.05), which recovered until the ninth postoperative
day (P<.05).
MRI RESULTS
Before surgery, no diffusion abnormalities were found on DW images.
The extent of preexisting vascular brain damage on T2- and proton-densityweighted
images is shown in Table 1. Interobserver
agreement was good for the evaluation of brain atrophy and preexisting vascular
damage ( 0.7) and perfect for the detection of new lesions on DW-MRI.
Following surgery, 17 new lesions were found on DW images in 9 (26%) of the
patients. In 5 patients, there were multiple lesions. The size was less than
5 mm for 11 lesions (Figure 2B),
5 to 10 mm for 4, and more than 10 mm for 2 (Figure 3B). The lesions were exclusively in a cortical or subcortical
location, suggesting an embolic pattern. However, we cannot exclude an impaired
clearance of emboli due to hypoperfusion in watershed areas22
(Figure 2B). Diffuse alterations
were not found. The presence of a new lesion following surgery was not related
to the time of surgery (P>.10), the extracorporeal
circulation time (P>.10), or the aortic cross-clamping
time (P>.10). Moreover, there was no significant
association between the presence of a new lesion and impairment in any neuropsychological
test performance 3 days after surgery (median split, P>.50).
However, patients with new lesions on DW-MRI revealed more extensive preexisting
diffuse white matter and periventricular hyperintensities on T2-weighted images
(P = .02). In 6 patients with a new lesion on DW-MRI,
a third MRI scan was performed 10 to 14 days following surgery. In these patients,
the lesions seen on the first postoperative DW-MRI scan also became visible
on T2- and proton-densityweighted images.
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Figure 2. T2-weighted (upper left) and orthogonal
axis diffusion-weighted images at the same level of a 71-year-old man before
(A) and 4 days after (B) coronary artery bypass grafting; 2 small new ischemic
lesions (arrows) appear in the left frontal lobe postoperatively, which are
already visible on the T2-weighted image. The other 3 quadrants show the 3
orthogonal axis images. R indicates right side.
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Figure 3. T2-weighted (upper left) and orthogonal
axis diffusion-weighted images at the same level of a 60-year-old man before
(A) and 3 days after (B) coronary artery bypass grafting; an ischemic area
appears in the right cerebellar hemisphere (arrow) postoperatively, which
is hardly seen on the correspondent T2-weighted image. Seven days later, the
patient underwent a follow-up magnetic resonance imaging scan and the lesion
was also visible on T2-weighted images. A thorough neurological examination
did not show a neurological deficit. The other 3 quadrants show the 3 orthogonal
axis images. R indicates right side.
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The ADC values in the cerebellum showed a significant increase 3 days
after surgery, indicative of vasogenic edema (left side: 0.67 ± 0.04
x 10-3 vs 0.69 ± 0.04 x 10-3 mm2/s [P<.01]; and right side:
0.68 ± 0.04 x 10-3 vs 0.70 ± 0.04 x
10-3 mm2/s [P<.005])
(Figure 4); values were also increased
in the paraventricular-supraventricular white matter (left side: 0.73 ±
0.05 x 10-3 vs 0.76 ± 0.05 x 10-3 mm2/s [P<.005]; and right side:
0.74 ± 0.04 x 10-3 vs 0.76 ± 0.05 x
10-3 mm2/s [P<.01])
(Figure 4). In the thalamus, there
was no significant change of ADC values (left side: 0.82 ± 0.05 x
10-3 vs 0.82 ± 0.04 x 10-3
mm2/s [P>.50]; and right side: 0.81 ±
0.04 x 10-3 vs 0.82 ± 0.04 x 10-3 mm2/s [P>.50]) (Figure 4).
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Figure 4. Mean ± SD apparent diffusion
coefficient (ADC) values before and after surgery, respectively: 1 and 2,
left side of the cerebellum; 3 and 4, right side of the cerebellum; 5 and
6, left side of the thalamus; 7 and 8, right side of the thalamus; 9 and 10,
left side of the centrum semiovale; and 11 and 12, right side of the centrum
semiovale. Significant differences are indicated.
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MRS RESULTS
Following surgery, the NAA/Cr ratio was significantly decreased compared
with the preoperative values (1.52 ± 0.19 vs 1.69 ± 0.20; P<.001) (Figure 5),
whereas the choline/Cr ratio remained unchanged (0.82 ± 0.10 vs 0.81
± 0.10; P>.50) (Figure 5). Lactate or lipid signals were not detected in any patient.
In 12 patients, a follow-up MRS scan was performed 10 to 14 days after surgery.
At this time, there was a significant increase of the NAA/Cr ratio compared
with the second examination (1.65 ± 0.10, P
= .01) (Figure 5) so that no significant
differences to the preoperative values were found any longer (P>.10). The extent of the postoperative NAA/Cr ratio decrease was significantly
correlated with the patient's age (rp
= -0.39, P = .04), the overall time of surgery
(rp = -0.38, P = .03), the extracorporeal circulation time (rp = -0.43, P<.01), and
the aortic cross-clamp time (rp = -0.36, P = .03). The NAA/Cr ratio decrease was significantly more
pronounced in the half of patients with a more severe deterioration in the
d2-letter cancellation test (P = .005), the Benton
visual retention test (P<.01), and the Reitan
trail-making test A (P<.01) 3 days after surgery
than in patients with a less severe impairment. In the block design test from
the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, no significant NAA/Cr ratio difference
was found between both groups (P = .07).
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Figure 5. Mean ± SD metabolite ratios
for NAA/Cr and Cho/Cr before surgery, 3 to 5 days after surgery, and 10 to
14 days after surgery. Significant differences are indicated. NAA indicates N-acetylaspartate; Cr, creatine; and Cho, choline.
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COMMENT
Coronary artery bypass grafting is one of the most common surgical procedures,
performed on more than 800 000 persons per year worldwide.1
Even though mortality is relatively low, a considerable morbidity rate is
found after CABG, especially affecting the central nervous system.1-4 Technical
progress has reduced the incidence of severe perioperative stroke23; nevertheless, postoperative impairment in neuropsychological
performance is frequently found,1, 3, 24
which may persist for up to 6 months.25 Microemboli,
hypoperfusion, and hypothermia have been suggested as causative factors, but
the precise mechanism remains unclear. Recent studies have used MRI to examine
the incidence of new lesions on T2-weighted images in relation to neuropsychological
and clinical findings. These studies have shown highly variable results, ranging
from no new lesions10 to an incidence of 42%.7 The reason for this discrepancy is the insensitivity
of T2-weighted images for detecting new lesions, especially in patients with
preexisting vascular lesions. The potential of DW-MRI in detecting clinically
silent lesions after neuroangiography14 has
been demonstrated because of its higher sensitivity and specificity for new
ischemic lesions. A retrospective study26 of
those with neurological symptoms following CABG has demonstrated ischemic
DW-MRI findings in 10 of 14 patients. In the present study, we found new ischemic
lesions in 9 (26%) of 35 patients following CABG with cardiopulmonary bypass,
with an embolic lesion pattern in the absence of neurological symptoms. It
remains unclear if the lesions were caused by air embolism or by thromboembolism.
Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography has demonstrated many microembolic signals
during cardiopulmonary bypassassisted cardiac surgery.8
Histologically, focal capillary dilations of 10 to 40 µm were found
after cardiopulmonary bypassassisted surgery,27
which possibly are caused by lipid microemboli.28
The sensitivity of DW-MRI is limited by the spatial resolution. Abnormalities
smaller than the pixel size (2.0 x 1.8 mm) can hardly be detected reliably.
Therefore, the lesions on DW-MRI are probably caused by thromboemboli or a
macroscopic air embolism rather than by a microscopic air embolism generated
by cavitational forces by the heart-lung machine or by temperature differences.
As in previous studies,14 ischemic lesions
were not associated with focal deficits or the prevalence of psychological
impairment, and all lesions were found in noneloquent brain regions. Nevertheless,
they represent structural ischemic brain damage because they became visible
on T2-weighted images 10 to 14 days following surgery. As expected, patients
with preexisting vasculopathy on MRI or older patients are particularly prone
to new ischemic lesions following surgery.
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed a decreased NAA/Cr ratio following
surgery, which was significantly associated with a more severe impairment
in postoperative neuropsychological test performance. The choline/Cr ratio
remained stable, indicating a depletion of NAA as the cause for the NAA/Cr
ratio decrease. The NAA/Cr ratio recovered until 10 to 14 days after surgery,
which was accompanied by an improvement in psychological performance measures. N-acetylaspartate is exclusively found in neuronal tissue29 and is diminished in patients with conditions associated
with loss of neurons, such as cerebral infarction.30
However, NAA is also reduced in potentially intact neurons with an impaired
function, like in patients with an acute multiple sclerosis plaque.31 In this case, a decrease of the NAA/Cr ratio may
be reversible.31 A similar decline and recovery
of NAA has recently been demonstrated in patients following head trauma32 and after abstinence from long-term alcohol abuse.33 The reversible NAA decrease indicates a transient
disturbance in the metabolism of neurons, which was correlated with the extent
of temporary neuropsychological deterioration. The amount of the NAA/Cr ratio
decrease was related to various variables expressing the duration of surgery
(extracorporeal circulation, bypass, and operation times). Moreover, the NAA/Cr
ratio depletion showed a correlation with the preexisting vascular damage,
which suggests an increased susceptibility for metabolic impairment of the
preinjured brain. Prolonged anesthesia may be one reason for the metabolic
disturbance, even though no significant metabolic changes occur during barbiturate
anesthesia in healthy volunteers.34
Extracorporeal circulation causing a microscopic air embolism8 and cerebral and systemic inflammatory activation35-36 may also be responsible for the temporary
metabolic disorder. A microscopic air embolism would result in diffuse cerebral
hypoxemia with a consecutive reduction of attenuated diffusion coefficient
values due to cytotoxic edema. By contrast, we found elevated ADC values in
the cerebral white matter, consistent with vasogenic edema. This finding supports
an activation of inflammatory processes in the brain that may be responsible
for a transient disturbance of the neuronal metabolism. The NAA/Cr ratios
recovered until 10 to 14 days after surgery and were accompanied by a normalization
of neuropsychometric variables, again indicating a relationship between metabolic
and functional variables. In future studies, MRS may allow for a more objective
and quantitative evaluation of cognitive impairment following CABG than neuropsychological
performance measures.
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Accepted for publication January 9, 2002.
Author contributions: Study concept and design (Drs Bendszus, Koltzenburg, and Solymosi); acquisition
of data (Drs Bendszus, Reents, Franke, Müllges, Babin-Ebell,
Warmuth-Metz, and Solymosi); analysis and interpretation of data (Drs Bendszus, Müllges, and Koltzenburg); drafting
of the manuscript (Drs Bendszus, Müllges, and Koltzenburg); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (Drs Reents, Franke, Babin-Ebell, and Warmuth-Metz); statistical
expertise (Drs Bendszus and Koltzenburg); administrative,
technical, and material support (Drs Reents, Franke, Müllges,
Babin-Ebell, and Warmuth-Metz); and study supervision (Drs Bendszus, Koltzenburg, and Solymosi).
We thank Martin Klein and Tanja Horn for helping with the data analysis;
and Karlheinz Reiners, MD, for critically reading the manuscript.
Corresponding author and reprints: Martin Bendszus, MD, Department
of Neuroradiology, University of Würzburg, Josef-Schneider-Strausse 11,
D-97080 Würzburg, Germany (e-mail: bendszus{at}neuroradiologie.uni-wuerzburg.de).
From the Departments of Neuroradiology (Drs Bendszus, Warmuth-Metz,
and Solymosi), Cardiothoracic Surgery (Drs Reents and Babin-Ebell), and Neurology
(Drs Franke, Müllges, and Koltzenburg), University of Würzburg,
Würzburg, Germany. Dr Koltzenburg is now with the Institute of Child
Health and the Institute of Neurology, University College London, London,
England.
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