4.5 Article

The influence of propofol or desflurane on postoperative cognitive dysfunction in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery

Journal

ANAESTHESIA
Volume 66, Issue 6, Pages 455-464

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2044.2011.06704.x

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  1. Baxter Healthcare

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We investigated the influence of either propofol or desflurane on the incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction in a randomised trial of 180 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. The primary outcome was incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction at 3 months, defined as 1 SD deterioration in two or more of 12 neurocognitive tests. Secondary outcomes included early postoperative cognitive dysfunction (between days three and seven), delirium on day one, morbidity and length of hospital stay. Early postoperative cognitive dysfunction was significantly higher with propofol compared with desflurane (56/84 (67.5%) vs 41/83 (49.4%), respectively, p = 0.018), but this effect was not seen at 3 months (10/87 (11.2%) vs 9/90 (10.0%), respectively. There was no difference in delirium (7/89 (7.9%) vs 12/91 (13.2%), respectively, length of hospital stay (median (IQR inverted left perpendicularrangeinverted right perpendicular) 7 (6-9 inverted left perpendicular4-15inverted right perpendicular) vs 6 (5-7 inverted left perpendicular5-16) days, respectively or other morbidities. Desflurane was associated with reduced early cognitive dysfunction.

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