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Groene, Philipp; Rapp, Miriam; Ninke, Tobias; Conzen, Peter; Hofmann-Kiefer, Klaus (2025): Impact of mild hypo- and hyperventilation on cerebral oxygen supply during general anesthesia. Perioperative Medicine, 14: 30. ISSN 2047-0525

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Abstract

Objective

Cerebral blood flow autoregulation is affected by several physiologic and medical factors. Especially arterial carbon dioxide pressures (PaCO 2 ) impact cerebral blood flow. Only extensive changes in end-tidal CO 2 have been studied so far. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of mild hypo- and hyperventilation on cerebral blood flow as assessed by regional cerebral red blood cell oxygen saturation (rSO 2 ) in two age groups.

Methods

Two groups of patients were compared under general anesthesia before the surgical procedure was started: A younger patient group (age < 40 years; YP) and older patients aged > 60 years (OP). Anesthetic management was standardized. In both groups, end-tidal CO 2 was adjusted either to a low-normal value of 35–37 mmHg or a high-normal value of 43–45 mmHg for 15 min each. The sequence of these interventions was randomized. rSO 2 was estimated by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). The primary outcome was defined as the difference in rSO2 between hypo- and hyperventilation between the two age groups.

Results

A total of 78 patients were included. In both groups, there was a statistically significant difference in rSO2 values after 15 min of hypo- versus hyperventilation. In the YP-group, rSO 2 was 74 ± 4% after 15 min of hypoventilation and decreased to 68 ± 6% during hyperventilation ( p < 0.001). In the OP-group, rSO 2 was 71 ± 5% and 65 ± 6%, respectively ( p < 0.001). There was no difference concerning changes in comparison of younger and elder patient groups (in both groups, Δ rSO 2 = 6 ± 3%; p = 0.732).

Conclusion

Even mild hypoventilation increased rSO 2 compared to mild hyperventilation and this difference occurred independent of age.

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