2022
DOI: 10.1111/pan.14433
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Impact of surgery and anesthesia during early brain development: A perfect storm

Abstract: Neonatal surgery and concomitant anesthesia coincide with a timeframe of rapid brain development. The speed and complexity of early brain development superimposed on immature regulatory mechanisms that include incomplete cerebral autoregulation, insufficient free radical scavenging and an immature immune response puts the brain at risk. Brain injury may have long-term consequences for multiple functional domains including cognition, learning skills, and behavior. Neurodevelopmental follow-up studies have noted… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…During this time, surgery performed with concomitant anesthesia may disrupt very important stages of development. It has been reported that complex surgeries and long anesthesia may lead to neurodevelopmental delays in cognition, learning, and behavior [ 48 ]. Recently, long-term neurodevelopment impairment in children with EA have been found; especially in motor function and in cognitive performance [ 49 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During this time, surgery performed with concomitant anesthesia may disrupt very important stages of development. It has been reported that complex surgeries and long anesthesia may lead to neurodevelopmental delays in cognition, learning, and behavior [ 48 ]. Recently, long-term neurodevelopment impairment in children with EA have been found; especially in motor function and in cognitive performance [ 49 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, a careful subgroup analysis should be performed to select those confounding factors that might also affect neurodevelopmental outcomes. A recent review by Keunen et al concluded that the key research topics should be the patterns of neonatal white matter injuries and the correlations among direct anesthetic neurotoxicity, inflammation and alteration of brain perfusion determined by immature vessels [ 54 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many different mechanisms have been pointed out as the underlying mechanism of possible neurotoxicity, including neuronal and oligodendrocyte apoptosis, inflammation, increased oxidative stress, and cerebral perfusion abnormalities by loss of vascular autoregulation, all based on animal studies. 47 In the only prospective randomized controlled study in literature (The neurodevelopmental outcome after general anesthesia or awake-regional anesthesia in infancy (GAS) trial), infants undergoing inguinal hernia repair were randomly assigned to either awake-regional or sevoflurane-based general anesthesia groups. 48 Primary outcome measure was the intelligence quotient measured at 5 years of age, and it was evaluated in 447 patients.…”
Section: Neurocognitive Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%