• Ann. Thorac. Surg. · Oct 1983

    Experimental and clinical assessment of the adequacy of partial bypass in maintenance of spinal cord blood flow during operations on the thoracic aorta.

    • J C Laschinger, J N Cunningham, I M Nathan, E A Knopp, M M Cooper, and F C Spencer.
    • Ann. Thorac. Surg. 1983 Oct 1; 36 (4): 417-26.

    AbstractWe studied both experimentally and clinically the efficacy of partial bypass techniques in maintaining spinal cord blood flow and physiological function during surgical procedures on the thoracoabdominal aorta. We attempted to define the level of distal aortic pressure required to safely ensure normal neurological function in the absence of critical intercostal occlusion. Six dogs underwent left thoracotomy with baseline measurements of spinal cord blood flow and spinal cord impulse conduction (somatosensory evoked potentials). Following exclusion of the entire descending thoracic aorta from the left subclavian artery to the T-13 level, partial left atrium-femoral artery bypass was instituted, and baseline levels of proximal and distal aortic pressure were maintained during a 30-minute stabilization period. Mean distal aortic pressure then was progressively altered at 30-minute intervals to 100, 70, and 40 mm Hg. Measurements of spinal cord blood flow and somatosensory evoked potential were repeated at the end of each interval for comparison with baseline. No significant changes in spinal cord blood flow or somatosensory evoked potential were observed in any animal with a distal aortic pressure greater than or equal to 70 mm Hg. With a pressure of 40 mm Hg, normal flow and somatosensory evoked potentials were maintained in 5 of the 6 dogs. Loss of somatosensory evoked potential, with simultaneous loss of spinal cord blood flow at the T-6 level, occurred in 1 dog. Restoration of distal aortic pressure to 70 mm Hg in all animals resulted in immediate return of somatosensory evoked potential. Loss of somatosensory evoked potential routinely occurred in animals with a distal aortic pressure less than 40 mm Hg. Clinically, 9 patients have undergone operation for lesions of the thoracoabdominal aorta using shunt or bypass techniques. Normal somatosensory evoked potentials were preserved in 7 patients with maintenance of adequate distal aortic pressure (greater than or equal to 60 mm Hg) without evidence of postoperative neurological deficit. Two patients showed hypotensive somatosensory evoked potential loss (distal aortic pressure less than 40 mm Hg). Prolonged distal hypotension (85 minutes of aortic cross-clamping) in the latter resulted in paraplegia. We conclude that maintenance of a distal aortic pressure greater than 60 to 70 mm Hg will uniformly preserve spinal cord blood flow in the absence of critical intercostal exclusion. Should distal aortic pressure be inadequate, early reversible changes in the somatosensory evoked potential will alert the surgeon. Failure to institute measures to reverse these changes may result in paraplegia.

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