Does cognition improve following LVAD implantation?

作者:Pavol Marykay A; Willey Joshua Z; Wei Ying; Yuzefpolskaya Melana; Marshall Randolph S; Marascalco Philip J; Harwood Jason; Lazar Ronald M
来源:General Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 2018, 66(8): 456-463.
DOI:10.1007/s11748-018-0947-5

摘要

Background Studies of cognition after LVAD surgery have produced mixed results. To explore whether cognition would improve, decline, or remain stable after LVAD surgery, we examined cognition before and 1-and 3-months after LVAD surgery. Patients with post-surgical stroke were excluded.
Methods 28 subjects (mean age = 54.31 +/- 12 years) comprised an observational case series from the DuraHeart LVAS device (R) trial. Cognitive testing was performed at baseline, 1-month, and 3-month post-surgery, and included tests of attention, memory, language, visualmotor speed (TMT) and visualconstruction.
Results No difference in cognition was found between baseline and 1-month exams (means z score improvement = 0.06, p = 0.43) but cognition improved significantly between baseline and 3-month exams (mean z score improvement = 0.34, p < 0.00001). Examination of individual test scores found, after correction for multiple comparisons, only the TMT variable was significantly different at the 3-month exam.
Conclusions We found significantly improved cognition 3 months after LVAD surgery in a subset of patients without postsurgical stroke. The reasons for the lack of cognitive improvement at the 1-month post-surgical assessment may include ongoing medical and physiological disruptions in the immediate post-operative period. Further research into the sources of delayed improvement is warranted. Cognitive assessments performed immediately after surgery should be interpreted with caution because the results may not reflect longer term cognitive outcomes. LVAD patients may require additional support to successfully manage their health in the weeks immediately following surgery but assistance needs may decrease over time.

  • 出版日期2018-8