AI Article Synopsis

  • Cerebral autoregulation maintains stable blood flow in the brain despite changes in blood pressure; inhalation anesthetics, like sevoflurane, can lower cerebral blood flow while still responding to carbon dioxide.
  • This study involved 46 patients undergoing flow diverter procedures, examining the effects of sevoflurane anesthesia on blood pressure and cerebral artery diameters before and during the procedure.
  • Results showed significant drops in mean arterial pressure (MAP) after anesthesia induction and changes in the diameter of anterior cerebral arteries, indicating a strong correlation between MAP changes and internal carotid artery diameter changes.

Article Abstract

Background: Cerebral autoregulation is a steady-state of cerebral blood flow despite major changes in arterial blood pressure. Inhalation anesthetics are cerebral vasodilators. In <1 MAC values, the net effect is a moderate decrease in cerebral blood flow and maintenance of responsiveness to carbon dioxide. This study aims to investigate the effects of steady-state sevoflurane anesthesia on hemodynamic and cerebral artery diameter measurements in patients undergoing flow diverter device placement under general anesthesia.

Methods: Forty-six patients aged 18-70 years who underwent flow diverter devices under general anesthesia were included in this study. Routine monitoring was performed on the patients. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) values were recorded. Internal carotid artery, middle cerebral artery and anterior cerebral artery diameter measurements were made from digital subtraction angiography (DSA) images of patients with anterior aneurysms. Baseline artery, right posterior cerebral artery and left posterior cerebral artery diameter measurements were made from DSA images of patients with posterior aneurysms. These measurements were recorded as preoperative measurements. The same measurements were made from the DSA images performed before the Flow diverter device placement procedure performed under steady-state sevoflurane anesthesia for the same patients. These measurements were recorded as peroperative measurements.

Results: The average age of the patients was 56.6±15.1. The MAP of the patients before induction was 76.28±5.13 mmHg, MAP after induction was 64.36±3.23 mmHg, and MAP during sevoflurane anesthesia was 68.26±4.30 mmHg, there was a statistically significant difference. There was a statistically significant difference between the preoperative and perioperative values of anterior cerebral artery diameters. There was a strong relationship between the MAP change percentage and the ICA diameter change percentage (p<0.001, p=-0.785) and a moderate relationship between the MCA diameter change percentage (p=0.033, p=-0.338).

Conclusion: In patients undergoing flow diverter devices, <1 MAC sevoflurane has a hemodynamic effect and creates significant vasodilation in the cerebral artery diameters.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/tjtes.2021.00269DOI Listing

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