Incidence and prognosis of seizures in infants after cardiac surgery with profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest
A. Ehyai, G. M. Fenichel and H. W. Bender Jr
Fifteen of 165 infants and young children who underwent surgical correction
of congenital cardiac defects using profound hypothermic and circulatory
arrest experienced generalized or focal seizures postoperatively. The cause
of the seizures was unexplained in ten. Among these ten, the onset of
seizures was 25 to 48 hours after surgery. With appropriate treatment, all
had complete seizure control by the third postoperative day. During 11 to
54 months (mean, 35.6 months) of follow-up, no further seizures occurred
and none had neurological abnormalities. Long-term anticonvulsant therapy
was not required for any of the children. There was no correlation between
the type of cardiac abnormality (cyanotic v acyanotic) or the duration of
hypothermic circulatory arrest and the development of seizures. Unexplained
seizures following cardiac surgery with hypothermia and circulatory arrest
are not a sign of permanent brain damage and do not detract from the use of
this technique for early definitive repair of congenital heart defects.
Current incidence of acute neurologic complications after open-heart operations in children
Menache et al.
Ann. Thorac. Surg. 2002;73:1752-1758.
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Cardiac surgery with deep hypothermic circulatory arrest produces less systemic inflammatory response than low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass in newborns
Tassani et al.
J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2002;123:648-654.
ABSTRACT
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REGIONAL LOW-FLOW PERFUSION PROVIDES CEREBRAL CIRCULATORY SUPPORT DURING NEONATAL AORTIC ARCH RECONSTRUCTION
Pigula et al.
J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2000;119:331-339.
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Relation of Seizures After Cardiac Surgery in Early Infancy to Neurodevelopmental Outcome
Rappaport et al.
Circulation 1998;97:773-779.
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Outcome After Open-Heart Surgery in Infants and Children
Miller et al.
J Child Neurol 1996;11:49-53.
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Regional cerebral perfusion abnormalities after cardiac operations: Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) findings in children with postoperative movement disorders
du Plessis et al.
J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 1994;107:1036-1043.
ABSTRACT
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A Comparison of the Perioperative Neurologic Effects of Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest versus Low-Flow Cardiopulmonary Bypass in Infant Heart Surgery
Newburger et al.
NEJM 1993;329:1057-1064.
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