American heart journal
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American heart journal · Jun 1993
ReviewDeep hypothermic circulatory arrest during cardiac surgery: effects on cerebral blood flow and cerebral oxygenation in children.
Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest has become an essential technique to allow repair of complex congenital cardiac lesions in children. The arrested state has concerned the surgeon, cardiologist, and anesthesiologist alike, and yet deep hypothermic circulatory arrest has been highly successful with a low incidence of neurologic sequelae. ⋯ That the hypothermic arrested brain likely becomes anoxic and recovery of the anoxic brain depends in large part on recirculatory hemodynamics suggests that the lack of hyperemia and hyperoxia may play more major roles than was previously believed. The mechanism of protection may be related to suppression of oxygen free radicals.