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A syndromal analysis of neuropsychological outcome following coronary artery bypass graft surgery
  1. A C Kneebone1,
  2. M A Luszcz1,
  3. R A Baker2,
  4. J L Knight2
  1. 1School of Psychology, Flinders University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia
  2. 2Cardiac Surgery Research Unit, Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, Australia
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr Anthony C Kneebone
 Department of Psychological Medicine, Flinders Medical Centre, Bedford Park 5042, Australia; tony.kneebonefmc.sa.gov.au

Abstract

Background: Studies of neuropsychological outcome following coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) have traditionally dichotomised patients as “impaired” or “unimpaired”. This conceals the potential heterogeneity of deficits due to different mechanisms and sites of brain injury.

Objectives: To explore neuropsychological outcome following CABG and determine to what extent it conforms to prototypic cortical and/or subcortical neurobehavioral syndromes and whether different intraoperative physiologic measures are associated with different subtypes of neuropsychological outcome.

Methods: Neuropsychological tests were administered to 85 patients before and after elective CABG and to 50 matched normal control subjects. Pre- to postoperative change scores were computed using standardised regression based norms. Change scores on selected memory measures were subjected to cluster analysis to identify qualitatively distinct subtypes of memory outcome. Emergent clusters were compared on non-memory measures, intraoperative physiologic measures, and demographic variables.

Results: Three subtypes of memory outcome were identified: memory spared (48% of patients), retrieval deficit (35%), and encoding/storage deficit (17%). Contrary to expectation, the subgroups were indistinguishable on measures of confrontation naming and manual dexterity and on intraoperative cardiac surgical physiologic measures and demographic variables. The encoding/storage deficit subgroup exhibited executive dysfunction.

Conclusions: Heterogeneous profiles of neuropsychological dysfunction were found following CABG although they did not tightly conform to prototypic cortical and subcortical neurobehavioral syndromes. This challenges the value and appropriateness of the common practice of collapsing individual test scores to arrive at a single figure to define “impairment”. Whether different subtypes of neuropsychological outcome are caused by different pathophysiologic mechanisms remains unknown.

  • BNT, Boston Naming Test
  • CABG, coronary artery bypass graft surgery
  • COWAT, Controlled Oral Word Association Test
  • CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass
  • CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test
  • DASS, Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales
  • DAT, dementia of the Alzheimer type
  • DSym, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised Digit Symbol subtest
  • NART-R, National Adult Reading Test-Revised
  • PegsRL, Purdue Pegboard simultaneous right and left hand trial
  • SRB, standardised regression based
  • TMT, Trail Making Test
  • VaD, vascular dementia
  • cardiopulmonary bypass
  • memory
  • neuropsychology

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Footnotes

  • This study was supported by the National Heart Foundation of Australia (Grant# G95A4458)

  • Competing interests: none declared