Volume 11, Issue 1 , Pages 61-68, 2008
Principles of Antegrade Cerebral Perfusion During Arch Reconstruction in Newborns/Infants
Antegrade cerebral perfusion (ACP) is a cardiopulmonary bypass technique that uses special cannulation procedures to perfuse only the brain during neonatal and infant aortic arch reconstruction. It is used in lieu of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA), and thus has the theoretical advantage of protecting the brain from hypoxic ischemic injury. Despite this, recent comparative studies have shown no difference in neurodevelopmental outcomes with ACP versus DHCA for neonatal arch repair. This article presents animal and human data demonstrating that ACP flows less than 30 mL/kg/min are inadequate for many patients, and may be the explanation for lack of outcome difference versus DHCA. A technique for ACP, its physiologic basis, and a neuromonitoring strategy are presented, and then the results of an outcome study are reviewed, showing that with ACP technique at higher flows of 50 to 80 mL/kg/min guided by neuromonitoring, periventricular leukomalacia is eliminated on postoperative brain magnetic resonance imaging after neonatal cardiac surgery.
Keywords: Antegrade cerebral perfusion, neonatal aortic arch reconstruction, near-infrared spectroscopy, transcranial Doppler
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Dr. Andropoulos is supported in part by National Institutes of Health NICHD grant no. 1R21 HD055501-01; Baylor College of Medicine General Clinical Research Center grant no. 0942, funded by NIH M01 RR00188; and by a Dana Foundation Brain Imaging grant. Dr. Andropoulos has received an honorarium from Somanetics, Inc.
PII: S1092-9126(07)00049-X
doi:10.1053/j.pcsu.2007.12.005
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 11, Issue 1 , Pages 61-68, 2008
