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Cerebral blood flow velocity and cognition in children before and after adenotonsillectomy

Cerebral blood flow velocity and cognition in children before and after adenotonsillectomy
Cerebral blood flow velocity and cognition in children before and after adenotonsillectomy
Objective: the goal was to determine whether amelioration of sleep-disordered breathing through adenotonsillectomy would reduce middle cerebral artery velocity in parallel with improvements in cognition and behavior.

Methods: for 19 children (mean age: 6 years) with mild sleep-disordered breathing, and 14 healthy, ethnically similar and age-similar, control subjects, parents repeated the Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire an average of 12 months after adenotonsillectomy. Children with sleep-disordered breathing underwent repeated overnight measurement of mean oxyhemoglobin saturation. Neurobehavioral tests that yielded significant group differences preoperatively were readministered. Middle cerebral artery velocity measurements were repeated with blinding to sleep study and neuropsychological results, and mixed-design analyses of variance were performed.

Results: the median Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire score significantly improved postoperatively, and there was a significant increase in mean overnight oxyhemoglobin saturation. The middle cerebral artery velocity decreased in the sleep-disordered breathing group postoperatively, whereas control subjects showed a slight increase. A preoperative group difference was reduced by the postoperative assessment, which suggests normalization of middle cerebral artery velocity in those with sleep-disordered breathing. The increase in mean overnight oxyhemoglobin saturation postoperatively was associated with a reduction in middle cerebral artery velocity in a subgroup of children. A preoperative group difference in processing speed was reduced postoperatively. Similarly, a trend for a preoperative group difference in visual attention was reduced postoperatively. Executive function remained significantly worse for the children with sleep-disordered breathing, compared with control subjects, although mean postoperative scores were lower than preoperative scores.

Conclusions: otherwise-healthy young children with apparently mild sleep-disordered breathing have potentially reversible cerebral hemodynamic and neurobehavioral changes
sleep-disordered breathing, apnea, adenotonsillectomy, hypoxia, cerebral blood flow velocity, neurocognitive function
0031-4005
75-82
Hogan, Alexandra M.
95ce4e2d-0f63-4ada-b43f-8f3a0c3b4a21
Hill, Catherine M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Harrison, Dawn
8cb95f3b-08b3-4511-a836-b07935566795
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Hogan, Alexandra M.
95ce4e2d-0f63-4ada-b43f-8f3a0c3b4a21
Hill, Catherine M.
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Harrison, Dawn
8cb95f3b-08b3-4511-a836-b07935566795
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58

Hogan, Alexandra M., Hill, Catherine M., Harrison, Dawn and Kirkham, Fenella J. (2008) Cerebral blood flow velocity and cognition in children before and after adenotonsillectomy. Pediatrics, 122 (1), 75-82. (doi:10.1542/peds.2007-2540). (PMID:18595989)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: the goal was to determine whether amelioration of sleep-disordered breathing through adenotonsillectomy would reduce middle cerebral artery velocity in parallel with improvements in cognition and behavior.

Methods: for 19 children (mean age: 6 years) with mild sleep-disordered breathing, and 14 healthy, ethnically similar and age-similar, control subjects, parents repeated the Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire an average of 12 months after adenotonsillectomy. Children with sleep-disordered breathing underwent repeated overnight measurement of mean oxyhemoglobin saturation. Neurobehavioral tests that yielded significant group differences preoperatively were readministered. Middle cerebral artery velocity measurements were repeated with blinding to sleep study and neuropsychological results, and mixed-design analyses of variance were performed.

Results: the median Pediatric Sleep Questionnaire score significantly improved postoperatively, and there was a significant increase in mean overnight oxyhemoglobin saturation. The middle cerebral artery velocity decreased in the sleep-disordered breathing group postoperatively, whereas control subjects showed a slight increase. A preoperative group difference was reduced by the postoperative assessment, which suggests normalization of middle cerebral artery velocity in those with sleep-disordered breathing. The increase in mean overnight oxyhemoglobin saturation postoperatively was associated with a reduction in middle cerebral artery velocity in a subgroup of children. A preoperative group difference in processing speed was reduced postoperatively. Similarly, a trend for a preoperative group difference in visual attention was reduced postoperatively. Executive function remained significantly worse for the children with sleep-disordered breathing, compared with control subjects, although mean postoperative scores were lower than preoperative scores.

Conclusions: otherwise-healthy young children with apparently mild sleep-disordered breathing have potentially reversible cerebral hemodynamic and neurobehavioral changes

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Published date: July 2008
Keywords: sleep-disordered breathing, apnea, adenotonsillectomy, hypoxia, cerebral blood flow velocity, neurocognitive function

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 73480
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/73480
ISSN: 0031-4005
PURE UUID: bbd7bb40-4a2c-4ac9-b338-e3094a4b8af4
ORCID for Catherine M. Hill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2372-5904
ORCID for Fenella J. Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

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Date deposited: 08 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:45

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Author: Alexandra M. Hogan
Author: Dawn Harrison

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