Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes

Cerebral hypoperfusion during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery has been thought to be a factor in the aetiology of brain damage with evidence of post operative neurological deficits. Cardiacspecific biomarkers such as troponin-I, troponin-T and CK-MB have been used extensively to predict myocardial in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nozeihan Jan Bappu, Panangipalli Venugopal, Akhshay Kumar Bisoi, Pankaj S Mankad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: McGill University 2020-12-01
Series:McGill Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mjm.mcgill.ca/article/view/658
id doaj-43f7bdf8a1bd48129f0223926ccc661c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-43f7bdf8a1bd48129f0223926ccc661c2021-01-22T03:36:20ZengMcGill UniversityMcGill Journal of Medicine1715-81252020-12-019210.26443/mjm.v9i2.658873Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomesNozeihan Jan BappuPanangipalli VenugopalAkhshay Kumar BisoiPankaj S MankadCerebral hypoperfusion during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery has been thought to be a factor in the aetiology of brain damage with evidence of post operative neurological deficits. Cardiacspecific biomarkers such as troponin-I, troponin-T and CK-MB have been used extensively to predict myocardial injury and ischaemia. This prospective study investigateed the level of troponin-I release in both off-pump and CPB-technique CABG surgery, as well as postulated a relationship of troponin release and post-operative neurological outcome. A total of 44 adult patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) were enrolled into either an off-pump or on-pump groups, with 22 patients participating in each. Group A (on-pump) underwent myocardial revascularisation with CPB and cardioplegic arrest, while Group B (off pump) underwent beating heart surgery. The measurement of troponin-I is a 1-step enzyme immunoassay method, with specificity and sensitivity set at 0.4 ug/mL. Neurological assessment was done using the NIH Stroke Scale, and neuropsychologic assessment was assessed on cognitive function using modified Weschler Memory Scale, for which scores were standardized to achieve a composite measure of concentration. A set of statistical analysis was done to correlate troponin-I release with different surgical techniques of CPB and OPCAB. Although each independent technique showed a marked rise of troponin-I from baseline to 6 hours post-operatively, the difference in troponin release was not significant between the 2 groups at specified time intervals (p=0.124). There was however a significant correlation of troponin-I release with the number of grafts used in the surgery, irrespective of the type of grafts or surgical technique. None of the patients in either group showed any neurological or cognitive deficits presenting at day 3 and day 7 post-operatively. The findings of this study demonstrate that there is no significant short-term cognitive or neurological dysfunctions post operatively, as indicated by troponin-I release in assessing the severity of myocardial injury.https://mjm.mcgill.ca/article/view/658cardiopulmonary bypass surgerycerebral hypoperfusiontroponin-i
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nozeihan Jan Bappu
Panangipalli Venugopal
Akhshay Kumar Bisoi
Pankaj S Mankad
spellingShingle Nozeihan Jan Bappu
Panangipalli Venugopal
Akhshay Kumar Bisoi
Pankaj S Mankad
Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
McGill Journal of Medicine
cardiopulmonary bypass surgery
cerebral hypoperfusion
troponin-i
author_facet Nozeihan Jan Bappu
Panangipalli Venugopal
Akhshay Kumar Bisoi
Pankaj S Mankad
author_sort Nozeihan Jan Bappu
title Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
title_short Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
title_full Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
title_fullStr Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Troponin-I release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
title_sort troponin-i release after cardiac surgery with different surgical techniques and post-operative neurological outcomes
publisher McGill University
series McGill Journal of Medicine
issn 1715-8125
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Cerebral hypoperfusion during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery has been thought to be a factor in the aetiology of brain damage with evidence of post operative neurological deficits. Cardiacspecific biomarkers such as troponin-I, troponin-T and CK-MB have been used extensively to predict myocardial injury and ischaemia. This prospective study investigateed the level of troponin-I release in both off-pump and CPB-technique CABG surgery, as well as postulated a relationship of troponin release and post-operative neurological outcome. A total of 44 adult patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) were enrolled into either an off-pump or on-pump groups, with 22 patients participating in each. Group A (on-pump) underwent myocardial revascularisation with CPB and cardioplegic arrest, while Group B (off pump) underwent beating heart surgery. The measurement of troponin-I is a 1-step enzyme immunoassay method, with specificity and sensitivity set at 0.4 ug/mL. Neurological assessment was done using the NIH Stroke Scale, and neuropsychologic assessment was assessed on cognitive function using modified Weschler Memory Scale, for which scores were standardized to achieve a composite measure of concentration. A set of statistical analysis was done to correlate troponin-I release with different surgical techniques of CPB and OPCAB. Although each independent technique showed a marked rise of troponin-I from baseline to 6 hours post-operatively, the difference in troponin release was not significant between the 2 groups at specified time intervals (p=0.124). There was however a significant correlation of troponin-I release with the number of grafts used in the surgery, irrespective of the type of grafts or surgical technique. None of the patients in either group showed any neurological or cognitive deficits presenting at day 3 and day 7 post-operatively. The findings of this study demonstrate that there is no significant short-term cognitive or neurological dysfunctions post operatively, as indicated by troponin-I release in assessing the severity of myocardial injury.
topic cardiopulmonary bypass surgery
cerebral hypoperfusion
troponin-i
url https://mjm.mcgill.ca/article/view/658
work_keys_str_mv AT nozeihanjanbappu troponinireleaseaftercardiacsurgerywithdifferentsurgicaltechniquesandpostoperativeneurologicaloutcomes
AT panangipallivenugopal troponinireleaseaftercardiacsurgerywithdifferentsurgicaltechniquesandpostoperativeneurologicaloutcomes
AT akhshaykumarbisoi troponinireleaseaftercardiacsurgerywithdifferentsurgicaltechniquesandpostoperativeneurologicaloutcomes
AT pankajsmankad troponinireleaseaftercardiacsurgerywithdifferentsurgicaltechniquesandpostoperativeneurologicaloutcomes
_version_ 1724329226633478144