(Circulation. 1996;94:1339-1345.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery (M.G., W.Y., G.L., P.S., N.K., B.B., E.W.); the Fourth Department of Internal Medicine (C.M., L.K., E.E., G.G.); the Department of Medical Computer Science (W.S.); and the Second Department of Internal Medicine (R.P.), University of Vienna, Austria.
Correspondence to Georg Grimm, MD, PhD, Second Department of Internal Medicine, General Hospital Klagenfurt, St Veiterstr 47, A-9020 Klagenfurt, Austria.
Background The effects of cardiac transplantation on cognitive brain function are uncertain.
Methods and Results We measured cognitive brain function and quality of life in out-of-hospital cardiac transplant candidates (n=55; ejection fraction, 19.9%; age, 54.8 years [means]). After transplantation, the patients were serially reevaluated at 4 months (n=25) and at 12 months (n=19). Brain function was measured objectively by cognitive P300 evoked potentials. Additionally, standard psychometric tests (Trail Making Test A, Mini-Mental State Examination, and Profile of Mood State test) were performed. Cognitive P300 evoked potentials were impaired in cardiac transplant candidates (359 ms, recorded at vertex) compared with 55 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects (345 ms, P<.01). Trail Making Test A was also abnormal (45 versus 31 seconds in 55 healthy subjects, P<.01). After transplantation, P300 measures were normalized at 4 months (345 ms, P<.05 versus before transplantation) but declined again at 12 months (352 ms, P=NS versus before transplantation). Stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that cumulative cyclosporine dosage was the only predictor of individual cognitive brain function 4 months (753 mg/kg body wt, P<.05) and 12 months (2006 mg/kg body wt, P<.01) after transplantation, respectively.
Conclusions Objective cognitive P300 auditory evoked potential measurements indicate that cognitive brain function is significantly impaired in patients suffering from stable end-stage heart failure. Successful cardiac transplantation is effective to fully normalize impaired brain function. Subsequent relative long-term decline of cognitive brain function after successful cardiac transplantation is strongly suggested to be related to cumulative cyclosporine neurotoxicity.
Key Words: transplantation cyclosporine brain
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