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Canadian Journal of Anesthesia, Vol 34, 549-554, Copyright © 1987 by Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society


ARTICLES

Electrocardiographic changes during and after isoflurane-induced hypotension for neurovascular surgery

PH Manninen, AM Lam and AW Gelb
Department of Anaesthesia, University Hospital, University of Western Ontario, London.

We evaluated the effects of isoflurane anaesthesia and induced hypotension in 33 neurosurgical patients by electrocardiographic monitoring and serial cardiac enzyme measurements. An electrocardiogram (ECG) and serum enzymes were obtained preoperatively, intraoperatively and postoperatively in the recovery room and for three consecutive days. ECG leads II, V1 and V5 were monitored continuously during anaesthesia. Patients who had had a subarachnoid haemorrhage and a high incidence of abnormal preoperative ECG (42 per cent). Ten patients developed ECG changes intraoperatively, but these changes were unrelated to isoflurane-induced hypotension. Fifty-three per cent of patients developed an abnormal postoperative ECG. These abnormalities consisted mostly of nonspecific ST segment or T wave changes. At no time was there an elevation in cardiac enzyme activity. We found that nonspecific ECG changes are relatively common in patients undergoing vascular neurosurgical procedures. There was no enzymatic evidence of myocardial infarction and we can only speculate that these ECG changes are related to intracranial surgical manipulation.





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Copyright © 1987 by the Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society.