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Objective Assessment of the Hemisphere-Specific Neurological Outcome of Carotid Endarterectomy: A Quantitative Saccadometric Analysis
Ist Teil von
Neurosurgery, 2010-12, Vol.67 (6), p.1534-1541
Ort / Verlag
Hagerstown, MD: Oxford University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2010
Quelle
Oxford Journals 2020 Medicine
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Carotid endarterectomy (CEA) improves the cerebrovascular prognosis of patients with carotid stenosis but carries a risk of causing postoperative neurological deterioration.
OBJECTIVE:
We assessed hemisphere-specific changes in saccadic eye movements to determine the utility of saccadometry as a quantitative neurosurgical outcome measure.
METHODS:
Visually evoked saccades were recorded at the bedside before and 2 days after surgery from 30 patients undergoing CEA for symptomatic carotid stenosis. Hemisphere-specific latency distributions were compared using Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistics. Latency distributions were fitted using the Linear Approach to Threshold with Ergodic Rate model and compared with binomial logistic regression.
RESULTS:
There were 21 males and mean age at surgery was 71 ± 7 years. Following CEA, the distribution of saccades initiated by the cerebral hemisphere distal to the operated artery significantly changed in 25 patients. By contrast, there were 14 significant contralateral-hemisphere saccadic changes (P < .001). Significant contralateral saccadic changes always co-occurred with significant ipsilateral changes and 10 of 14 patients with contralateral saccadic change had contralateral carotid stenosis. There was a significantly greater postoperative reduction in early saccades generated by the ipsilateral hemisphere than by the contralateral hemisphere (P < .02)
CONCLUSION:
CEA leads to significant hemisphere-specific subclinical changes in saccadic performance and, in particular, differentially affects the proportion of early saccades, a measure of the ability of the frontal cortex to successfully inhibit lower centers, generated by the 2 hemispheres. Saccadometry, a bedside test, provides data that can be statistically compared for individual and groups of patients. It could allow the neurological outcome of carotid surgery to be objectively quantified.