Mjg. Harrison, NEUROLOGIC COMPLICATIONS OF CORONARY-ARTERY BYPASS-GRAFTING - DIFFUSEOR FOCAL ISCHEMIA, The Annals of thoracic surgery, 59(5), 1995, pp. 1356-1358
The central nervous system complications arising during or shortly aft
er coronary artery bypass grafting are due to cerebral ischemia associ
ated with hypotension and to embolism. Hemodynamic compromise produces
a spectrum of disturbance of consciousness and mentation ranging from
brain death and coma through the chronic vegetative state to mild con
fusion. Watershed infarction may add to this picture focal deficits su
ch as visual disorientation and cortical field defects or bibrachial w
eakness (the ''man in a barrel'' syndrome). Macroembolism accounts for
most perioperative strokes and is related to cardiac arrhythmias, to
intracardiac thrombus, and particularly to the severity and friable na
ture of any aortic atheroma. Microembolism can cause focal problems in
the watershed territory but is normally responsible for diffuse chang
es as seen in the neuropsychologic sequelae of coronary artery bypass
grafting. Coexistent carotid artery disease rarely contributes to the
postoperative neurologic changes.