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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Of 274 operated cases of cerebral aneurysm, temporary occlusion of the cerebral arteries was used in 215 cases (79%). Of the 215 cases, 177 (82%) showed no sequelae. The maximum safe time limit for temporary occlusion at the bilateral A1 portion of the anterior cerebral arteries was 48.5 min at 26 degrees C, 47 min at 27 degrees C, and 42 min at 28 degrees C; at the M1 portion of the middle cerebral arteries, it was 30 min at 26 degrees C, 35 min at 27 degrees C, 36 min at 27.5 degrees C, 40 min at 30 degrees C and 19 min at normothermia; and at the dominant A1 portion, in cases of hypoplasia at the contralateral A1 portion, it was 82 min at 26 degrees C, 86 min at 27.5 degrees C, and 63 min at 28 degrees C. Consequently, when performing direct surgery on aneurysms of the anterior communicating artery, unilateral clamping of the A1 portion prevents rupture during surgery and has the advantage of prolonging the occlusion time. Neurological sequelae may have been caused by the temporary occlusion of the cerebral artery in one case, and by the temporary occlusion or the surgical operation in six cases. Of the 22 fatal cases, only one was thought to be due to the temporary occlusion of the cerebral artery. Intermittent release of the clamping for 5 to 10 min is considered to be effective in prolonging the safe time limit of temporary clamping of the cerebral arteries in surgery of cerebral aneurysm under moderate hypothermia.
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PMID:The safe time limit of temporary clamping of cerebral arteries in the direct surgical treatment of intracranial aneurysm under moderate hypothermia. 76 Feb 46

Since our initial experience on April 28, 1989, a total of nine patients have received treatment for giant cerebral aneurysm using cardiopulmonary bypass with deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest. The following data summarize our findings associated with these patients. The average patient's age was 46 years (range: 16 to 59 years of age). Seven patients were female, two were male. The procedure required approximately eight hours to complete with an average cardiopulmonary bypass time of 104 minutes (range: 60 to 140 minutes). Circulatory arrest time averaged 26 minutes (range, 12 to 45 minutes) with an average of 30 minutes (range: 10 to 62 minutes) required to cool the patient to below 18 degrees C (64 degrees F). An average of 54 minutes (range: 28 to 81 minutes) was required to warm the patient to a bladder temperature of 36 degrees C (96.8 degrees F). During the cooling period, five patients went into asystole spontaneously, four patients required bolus of 20 mEq of potassium chloride, and upon rewarming, spontaneous defibrillation occurred in six patients. Three patients were defibrillated without difficulty with external shock. The average number of blood products administered in each of the nine patients was 3.6 units of packed red blood cells, 3 units of fresh frozen plasma, and 6.5 units of platelets. Six patients recovered postoperatively without complication, and the recovery of three patients was affected by the complex anatomical location of the giant aneurysm. Cardiopulmonary bypass with deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest offers an alternative approach to the treatment of giant cerebral aneurysms considered inoperable by conventional techniques. The effectiveness of each procedure depends on the collaborative efforts of every member of the perioperative nursing team, the neurosurgical team, the cardiac surgical team, the neuroanesthesiology team, and the perfusionists. Careful planning and anticipation at every stage of the surgery can reduce surgical time, cardiopulmonary bypass time, and most importantly, circulatory arrest time.
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PMID:Giant cerebral aneurysm repair. Incorporating cardiopulmonary bypass and neurosurgery. 192 49

The anaesthetic management of a patient whose giant cerebral aneurysm was clipped is described. Profound hypothermia and thiopentone were used to provide cerebral protection during circulatory arrest. Atracurium was used to provide muscle relaxation; the level of neuromuscular block and plasma concentrations of atracurium and laudanosine were measured.
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PMID:Anaesthesia for the treatment of a giant cerebral aneurysm under hypothermic circulatory arrest. 235 34

Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) were used intraoperatively 25 cerebral aneurysm cases during the temporary occlusion of the parent artery of the aneurysm under moderate hypothermia. This technique of vascular occlusion is very useful in facilitating the dissection of difficult aneurysms as well as in reducing the risk of intraoperative rupture. Middle cerebral artery (MCA) cases in Hunt & Hess's grade III, undergoing early surgery, who had shown a transient neurological deficit at the time of subarachnoid haemorrhage or where vasospasm was evident in intraoperatively were prominent among 6 cases where the median nerve SEP was lost within 13 minutes of temporary MCA occlusion at 28.6 degrees C to 31.1 degrees C. A transient neurological deficit was seen in one of these and a permanently increased deficit in the other. In contrast, the SEP was well maintained during occlusion times of upto 52 minutes in 8 cases in the absence of any of the above circumstances. The SEP was lost after 7 minutes in one of 5 cases of internal carotid artery occlusion; this was followed by a paresis of a few hours' duration. The posterior tibial nerve SEP was absent for one minute in one of 5 cases of bilateral A1 segment occlusion; none of these cases showed a postoperative deficit. It is concluded that 1. appropriate SEP monitoring can make a major contribution to patient safety in aneurysm surgery, 2. substantially longer cerebrovascular occlusion times are permissible during hypothermia than at normal temperatures and 3. the employment of additional cerebral protective measures should be considered in cases at high risk from ischaemic damage.
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PMID:Somatosensory evoked potentials in cerebral aneurysm surgery. 339 99

A 31-year old primigravida was admitted at 31 week gestation for subarachnoid haemorrhage. Cerebral angiography revealed an aneurysm on the left middle cerebral artery. Eleven days later, the aneurysm was clipped off. General anaesthesia was induced with thiopentone, pancuronium and fentanyl, and maintained with fentanyl (40 micrograms.kg-1) and isoflurane in air/O2 with a non-rebreathing circuit. The patient was mechanically ventilated to maintain mild hypocapnia. Arterial hypotension was induced by increasing the inspired isoflurane concentration from 1 to 3 vol%. The response was immediate and a mean arterial pressure of 60 mmHg was maintained for 80 min with an inspired isoflurane concentration of 2.5 vol%. Foetal heart rate was monitored before, during and after general anaesthesia. Loss of beat to beat variation was observed after induction, and foetal heart rate slowly decreased from 150 to 115 b.min-1 at the end of the operation. Postoperative state was good, except for transitory aphasia. At 35 week gestation, the patient went into premature labour, with hypothermia of 39.5 degrees C; an emergency caesarean section was performed. The 2,340 g female infant had a 10 min Apgar score of 8. One month later, clinical examination of the mother and daughter was quite normal. The precautions and anaesthetic management of patients suffering from ruptured cerebral aneurysm during the end of pregnancy are reviewed. Hypotensive agents are discussed.
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PMID:[Hypotension induced by isoflurane for the treatment of intracranial aneurysm in late pregnancy]. 343 89

Ninety-two cerebral aneurysm cases treated by clipping under moderate hypothermia are reviewed. Twenty-three of these cases received pentobarbitone during surgery in doses sufficient to render the EEG flat. The overall combined mortality and morbidity (complication rate) among 69 non-barbiturate cases was 21.7%. There were significant differences in results between aneurysms in different anatomical locations. The complication rate among eight middle cerebral artery aneurysm cases was 62.5% and among ten internal carotid artery bifurcation cases 40%, while that among nineteen internal carotid artery cases was 16% and among 27 anterior communicating complex cases 7.4%. The overall complication rate among 23 pentobarbitone cases was 17%. There were no complications among eight middle cerebral artery cases; one of two internal carotid bifurcation cases became hemiplegic following occlusion of the middle cerebral artery at is origin. The complication rate among nine internal carotid cases was 22%. No difficulties were experienced regarding haemodynamic stability or cardiac rhythm while using pentobarbitone at normothermia or at 28 degrees C. It is suggested that cerebral aneurysms involving the middle cerebral artery which appear to be most at risk may have the most to gain by the prophylactic use of pentobarbitone during surgery.
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PMID:Barbiturates for cerebral aneurysm surgery. A review of preliminary results. 402 23

Although cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) with hypothermia and circulatory arrest is routinely used for certain cardiovascular procedures, its advantages have infrequently been applied for other unusual surgical problems. Fourteen patients (six men and eight women, average age 48 years, range 29 to 74 years) underwent 15 operations over a 4-year period beginning in November 1978. Preoperative diagnosis included giant middle cerebral aneurysm (n = 8), internal carotid aneurysm (3), basilar artery aneurysm (2), and medullary hemangioblastoma (2). All patients had lesions that were considered inoperable by standard neurosurgical techniques. Operative technique consisted of peripheral cannulation with a long and short femoral vein cannula for venous return (24 to 28F) and a single femoral arterial cannula (18 to 24F). CPB flows ranged from 1 to 3.5 L/min, and the total CBP times averaged 146 minutes (range 66 to 282 minutes). Circulatory arrest times averaged 21 minutes (range 5 to 51 minutes), with two patients having no period of circulatory arrest. Lowest core temperature ranged from 16 degrees to 20 degrees C, with cooling and rewarming aided by Brown-Harrison heat exchangers placed in a countercurrent fashion within the venous return line. The heart spontaneously defibrillated in six patients, and external countershock was required in nine patients. No difficulty was encountered with cardiac distention. The intended operation was accomplished in all cases with 13 of 14 patients being discharged from hospital, having had a good neurosurgical result. One patient sustained a hemorrhagic infarction of the cerebellum and pons and is presently recovering. Our experience indicates that peripheral CPB with induced hypothermia and circulatory arrest is a safe technique for approaching otherwise inoperable neurosurgical lesions.
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PMID:Reappraisal of cardiopulmonary bypass with deep hypothermia and circulatory arrest for complex neurosurgical operations. 687 41

A case of cardiac arrest during moderate hypothermia and profound hypotension following rupture of a cerebral aneurysm is described. The patient survived with few neurological sequelae directly attributable to the period of cerebral ischaemia. The protective effect of hypothermia in the prevention of neurological damage is illustrated as are the difficulties of resuscitation.
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PMID:Cardiac arrest during moderate hypothermia for cerebrovascular surgery. 743 98

The indications for heparin-coated extracorporeal circuits cannot be defined or limited at present. Clinical investigation remains at an early stage of development. In situations where the risk of systemic anticoagulation is high, this technology would seem to hold great promise. Examples include extracorporeal lung assist and resuscitation from accidental hypothermia. Some have also suggested the use of heparin-coated circuits for percutaneous bypass in cardiopulmonary resuscitation. A significant advantage might also accrue in noncardiac surgical procedures requiring cardiopulmonary bypass, such as complex cerebral aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation resections, resections of the tracheal carina, or bilateral lung transplantations. Its role in routine cardiac surgical procedures remains uncertain, but the work of von Segesser et al suggests a need for continued investigation in that setting using reduced levels of systemic anticoagulation. That endeavor will be greatly assisted by the recent development of heparin-coated cardiotomy reservoirs. Although heparin-coated circuits have been safely used for extracorporeal lung assist with little or no systemic anticoagulation, prospective studies are clearly needed to determine if this approach is advantageous, and it would seem appropriate to develop heparin coating for silicone-based membrane oxygenators.
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PMID:Heparin-coated cardiopulmonary bypass circuits. 820 14

Thiopental intravenous injections before temporary clipping and mild hypothermia have protective effects in the setting of cerebral ischemia, and are used clinically in some centers. However, it is not known whether mild hypothermia affects thiopental-induced electroencephalogram (EEG) burst suppression. In this study, the authors compared the onset and duration of EEG suppression by thiopental in normothermic (n=10) and mildly hypothermic (n=10) patients undergoing cerebral aneurysm surgery. Spectral analysis was used to compare the prethiopentonal continuous EEG patterns in normothermic and mild hypothermic patients. The patients' body temperatures were controlled by a circulating water mattress and intravenous fluids (normothermia = 36.4+/-0.1 degrees C, mild hypothermia = 33.3+/-0.1 degrees C). Immediately before temporary clipping, thiopental sodium (5 mg/kg) was administered intravenously. Onset time (the amount of time from thiopental injection to the first complete EEG suppression), duration of suppression (the amount of time from the first complete EEG suppression to recovery on continuous EEG from burst suppression), and maximum duration of isoelectric EEG (the longest time interval between two bursts during burst suppression) were measured. Onset time was shortened (25.8+/-1.4 versus 43.5+/-5.6 seconds), and duration of suppression (531.0+/-56.6 versus 165.0+/-16.9 seconds) and the maximum duration of isoelectric EEG (47.7+/-5.8 versus 22.8+/-2.0 seconds) were prolonged in the patients with mild hypothermia. In two normothermic patients, the standard dose of thiopental did not produce burst suppression, but only a mild decrease in spectral edge frequency. The authors concluded that the effects of mild hypothermia on thiopental-induced EEG suppression are not simply additive, but synergistic.
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PMID:The effects of mild hypothermia on thiopental-induced electroencephalogram burst suppression. 968


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