|

Venous Congestion And Cognitive Dysfunction After Cardiac Surgery

RECRUITINGSponsored by Zhuan Zhang
Actively Recruiting
SponsorZhuan Zhang
Started2024-11-01
Est. completion2026-10-31
Eligibility
Age18 Years+
Healthy vol.Accepted

Summary

Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a common central nervous system complication after surgery and anesthesia. Its primary clinical manifestations include a significant decline in cognitive abilities after surgery and anesthesia, encompassing memory, attention, coordination, orientation, language fluency, and executive function. POCD may persist for weeks or even years, affecting patient recovery, prolonging hospital stays, and potentially leading to additional physical and mental illnesses, increased mortality, and a significant burden on patients and their families. In cardiac surgery patients, the incidence of POCD ranges from 30% to 80% in the weeks following the procedure. The brain tissue is enclosed in a rigid anatomical structure; when there is an obstruction to venous return from the brain, intracranial pressure can increase, and blood supply to the brain tissue can decrease, leading to central nervous system dysfunction. Systemic venous congestion can occur when there is right heart dysfunction or excessive volume load. When right heart failure and/or volume overload occurs, changes in right atrial pressure are transmitted to the venous system of organs throughout the body, with dilatation of the inferior vena cava (IVC), obstruction of blood return from the hepatic, portal, and renal veins, and abnormal venous flow signals and altered ultrasound Doppler flow patterns. The primary objective of this prospective cohort study is to explore if intraoperative systemic venous congestion is associated with POCD after cardiac surgery. This study will also investigate the relationship between intraoperative systemic venous congestion and postoperative complications, and the relationship between each separate venous congestion and POD after cardiac surgery.

Eligibility

Age: 18 Years+Healthy volunteers accepted
Inclusion Criteria:

1. Patients scheduled to undergo elective cardiac surgery via a midline thoracic incision;
2. ≥18 years;
3. A preoperative MMSE score\>23, without consciousness or language barriers, capable of cooperating with neurological examinations, cognitive function tests, and other assessments of neurological function.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Contraindications for TEE;
2. Emergency cardiac surgery;
3. Major vascular surgery;
4. Redo cardiac surgery;
5. Severe infection requiring continuous antibiotic therapy;
6. Severe preoperative heart failure with left ventricular ejection fraction \< 30%;
7. A critical preoperative state (mechanical circulatory support, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, current renal replacement therapy, mechanical ventilation, or cardiac arrest necessitating resuscitation);
8. Multi-organ dysfunction;
9. Known conditions that may interfere with the assessment or interpretation of hepatic vein, portal vein blood flow (such as liver cirrhosis or portal vein thrombosis) or the renal vein blood flow (such as urinary tract obstruction);
10. Planned cardiac transplantation or ventricular assist device implantation;
11. Pregnancy;
12. Insufficient ultrasonographic imaging;
13. Restarting CPB after first CPB cessation during surgery;
14. Requirement for cardiac assist devices (ECMO, IABP, or ventricular assist device) after CPB intraoperatively;
15. Neurological or psychiatric diagnoses that may affect cognitive performance or cognitive testing;
16. Documented delirium before surgery

Conditions2

Heart DiseaseIntraoperative Venous Congestion And Cognitive Dysfunction After Cardiac Surgery

Browse More Trials

Trial data from ClinicalTrials.gov. Trial status and eligibility can change — verify directly with the study contact or on ClinicalTrials.gov.

This site does not provide medical advice. Always consult your doctor before considering enrollment in a clinical trial. Learn more on our About page.