The Importance of the Temporary Clip Removal Phase on Exposure to Hypoxia: On-Line Measurement of Temporal Lobe Oxygen Levels During Surgery for Middle Cerebral Artery Aneurysms

Neurosurgery. 2022 Apr 1;90(4):475-484. doi: 10.1227/NEU.0000000000001865.

Abstract

Background: Most studies concerning intraoperative temporary arterial occlusion overlook the period between and after clip placement.

Objective: To analyze the brain tissue oxygen tension through the process by which anterograde arterial blood flow is re-established after temporary clipping (TR).

Methods: In this prospective observational study, patients who presented to surgery for middle cerebral artery aneurysms were continuously monitored with ICM+, to obtain temporal (downstream) PbtO2 levels while M1 segment temporary clips were applied and removed. PbtO2 changes were analyzed and compared with the clipping phase, and measures of exposure to hypoxia were defined and assessed during both phases and used in a model to test the impact of extending them.

Results: Eighty-six TRs (20 patients) were recorded. The mean acquired amount of time per clip release (CR) event was 336.7 seconds. Temporary clip removal produced specifically shaped, highly individual PbtO2 curves that correlated with their corresponding clipping phase events but developing slower and less consistently. The CR phase was responsible for greater cumulative exposure to hypoxia than the clip application phase through the first and second minutes of each. In our model, the duration of the TR phase was mostly responsible for the total exposure to hypoxia, and longer CR phases reduced the mean exposure to hypoxia.

Conclusion: During the clip removal phase, the brain tissue is still exposed to oxygen levels that are significantly below the baseline, reverting through a singular, dynamic process. Therefore, it must be regarded by surgeons with the same degree of attention as its counterpart.

Publication types

  • Observational Study

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Hypoxia
  • Intracranial Aneurysm* / surgery
  • Oxygen
  • Surgical Instruments
  • Temporal Lobe

Substances

  • Oxygen