Objective. Temporary Internal Carotid Artery (ICA) clipping necessary during aneurysm surgery was used as a model to investigate metabolic changes in the human brain during defined episodes of ischaemia. Design. An observational study using intracerebral monitors: PBO2 (Neurotrend) and microdialysis (CMA, Sweden). Subjects. 16 patients monitored during complex aneurysm surgery. Outcome Measures. Changes in extracellular concentrations of glucose, lactate, and glutamate and lactate/pyruvate ratio (L/P). Results. Mean age was 55. 10 patients presented with subarachnoid haemorrhage and 6 with mass effect (4 giant). Temporary ICA occlusion was required for dissection (n = 9), intraoperative rupture (n = 5) or aneurysmal thrombeclomy (n = 2). The mean total duration was 15 minutes (range 4-52 minutes). No infarcts developed in the monitored regions. Microdialysis was unsuccessful in 3 patients and Neurotrend in 1. Patients were grouped according to the degree and duration of fall in PBO2: minimal brief falls were not associated with microdialysis changes (n = 5). More pronounced falls were associated with increases in L/P (n = 4). Only prolonged occlusions averaging 42 minutes (n = 3) with PBO2 sustained below 1 kPa were associated with rises in glutamate. Conclusions. Brief temporary ICA occlusion caused an initial increased L/P. Glutamate increases were only seen after occlusion that was prolonged with PBO2 below 1.0 kPa. © Springer-Verlag 2002.
CITATION STYLE
Kett-White, R., Hutchinson, P. J. A., Al-Rawi, P. G., Gupta, A. K., O’Connell, M. T., Pickard, J. D., & Kirkpatrick, P. J. (2002). Extracellular lactate/pyruvate and glutamate changes in patients during per-operative episodes of cerebral ischaemia. Acta Neurochirurgica, Supplement, 81, 363–365. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-6738-0_92
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