Post-Operative Cognitive Decline (POCD) is common after cardiac surgery and associated with increased morbidity and mortality. The pathophysiology of POCD is only poorly understood. Causes include hypoperfusion, microemboli and the systemic inflammatory response, which result in a reduction of cerebral oxygen delivery. Cerebral oxygenation can be monitored non-invasively by measuring frontal lobe oxygen saturation (rSO2). The bispectral index (BIS) of the electroencephalogram is widely known to measure depth of anaesthesia, and there is a high correlation between BIS, a dimensionless calculated number between 0 and 100, and clinical criteria of sedation. With BIS below 60 recall is extremely low. The investigators demonstrated recently that inappropriately high levels of anaesthesia may be associated with poorer long-term outcomes in cognition after non-cardiac surgery (Ballard et al. 2012). Whether optimisation of the depth of anaesthesia and cerebral oxygenation has an effect on postoperative cognitive function in patients undergoing cardiac surgery is unknown. The investigators hypothesize that the incidence of POCD in elderly patients (\> 65 years old) at 6 weeks is less with mildly deep anaesthesia (BIS 50 +- 10) and optimised rSO2 (interventions when rSO2 drops below 15% of baseline reading) when compared with current practice (BIS blinded anaesthesia, reflecting moderately to highly deep anaesthesia and blinded rSO2 measurements).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
88
The intervention group receives isoflurane at a concentration that results in a BIS value between 40-60 intra-operatively.
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
London, Denmark Hill, United Kingdom
Incidence of postoperative cognitive decline after bypass surgery
Time frame: Six weeks after bypass surgery
Incidence of postoperative cognitive decline 5 days and 1 year after bypass surgery
Time frame: Five days and one year postoperatively
Difference in degree of postoperative cognitive decline at 5 days, 6 weeks or 1 year after bypass surgery
Time frame: 5days, 6 weeks or 1 year postoperatively
Postoperative Delirium
Time frame: 3-5 days postoperatively
Postoperative central nervous system and myocardial biochemical markers
Time frame: up to 48 hours postoperatively
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