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Clinical Trial Summary

Smooth emergence (wake up) from anesthesia is an important consideration in patients undergoing neurosurgical procedures as blood pressure changes associated with violent emergence can cause intracranial hemorrhage and brain swelling. At the same time, emergence should also be quick so that patients' neurological function can be assessed at a timely manner. Pattern of emergence from anesthesia is poorly investigated and understood.


Clinical Trial Description

Epilepsy surgery involves resecting epileptogenic tissues including limbic structures which may be functionally normal. Hence the emergence process can be complicated in patients having diseased limbic structures or those having therapeutic removal of limbic structures as in epilepsy surgery. Limbic structures are responsible for memory, language and executive function and hence loss of some of these higher functions is to be expected in the postoperative period. Preoperative neuropsychological assessments are often used to predict their risk for postoperative loss of higher functions and behavior changes. In our experience the investigators have seen that there is a spectrum of emergence characteristics in patients undergoing temporal lobectomy that can vary from dangerously agitated patient to much sedated, unarousable patient. Delirium and agitation can be dangerous and have serious consequences for the patient such as injury, increased pain, hemorrhage, self-extubation and removal of catheters requiring physical or chemical restraint. On the other hand the unarousable patient may pose dangerous airway complications and limit neurological assessment in the immediate postoperative period. Hence it is essential to have a clue about post anesthesia emergence behavior in patients having epilepsy surgeries. The aim of this study is to look at the pattern of emergence from anesthesia after epilepsy surgery and to determine if preoperative neuropsychological assessment help predict the pattern of emergence in patients undergoing anterior temporal lobectomy and amygdalohippocampectomy. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02360098
Study type Observational
Source University Health Network, Toronto
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date December 2014
Completion date March 2017

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