Brain microemboli during cardiac surgery or aortography
- PMID: 2252360
- DOI: 10.1002/ana.410280403
Brain microemboli during cardiac surgery or aortography
Abstract
We have observed many focal dilatations or very small aneurysms in terminal arterioles and capillaries of 4 of 5 patients and 6 dogs who had recently undergone cardiopulmonary bypass. A smaller number of sausagelike dilatations distended medium-sized arterioles. Two other patients had a small number of the same microvascular changes following proximal aortography. Thirty-four patients and 6 dogs not undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass had none. (A 35th patient who had not undergone cardiopulmonary bypass or aortography showed a small number of dilatations; mediastinal air was a suggested source.) Some of the dilatations exhibited various forms of birefringence. Because most of the dilatations appear empty, we speculate that they are the sites of gas bubbles or fat emboli that have been removed by the solvents used in processing. These microvascular events, occurring only in conjunction with major arterial interventions, may be the anatomical correlate of the neurological deficits or moderate to severe intellectual dysfunction seen in at least 24% of patients after cardiac surgical procedures assisted by cardiopulmonary bypass.
Comment in
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Brain and retinal microemboli during cardiac surgery.Ann Neurol. 1991 Nov;30(5):736-7. doi: 10.1002/ana.410300521. Ann Neurol. 1991. PMID: 1763902 No abstract available.
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Neurological complications of open heart surgery.Ann Neurol. 1990 Oct;28(4):475-6. doi: 10.1002/ana.410280402. Ann Neurol. 1990. PMID: 2252359 No abstract available.