Coronary-artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is known to improve cardiac function and decrease mortality, albeit, this method of treatment is also associated with a neuropsychiatric complications including postoperative delirium. The pathophysiology of delirium after cardiac surgery remains poorly understood. Thus, the purpose of this study was to investigate whether oxidative stress reflected by decreased preoperative and postoperative plasma antioxidant activity is independently associated with delirium after cardiac surgery. The second aim was to assess whether decreased antioxidant activity is stress-related or mediated by other pathologies such as major depressive disorder (MDD), anxiety disorders, and cognitive impairment. Furthermore, the putative relationship between pre- and postoperative soluble receptor for advanced glycation end-products (sRAGE) overexpression and plasma antioxidant capacity was evaluated. The patients cognitive status was assessed 1 day preoperatively with the use of the Mini-Mental State Examination Test and the Clock Drawing Test. A diagnosis of MDD and anxiety disorders was established on the basis of DSM-5 criteria. Blood samples for antioxidant capacity and sRAGE levels were collected both preoperatively and postoperatively. The Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit was used within the first 5 days postoperatively to screen for a diagnosis of delirium. Postoperative delirium was diagnosed in 34% (61 of 177) of individuals. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that low baseline antioxidant capacity was independently associated with postoperative delirium development. Moreover, increased risk of delirium was observed among patients with a preoperative diagnosis of MDD associated with antioxidant capacity decreased postoperatively. According to receiver operating characteristic analysis, the most optimal cutoff values of the preoperative and postoperative antioxidant capacity that predict the development of delirium were 1.72 mM and 1.89 mM, respectively. Pre- and postoperative antioxidant capacity levels were negatively correlated with postoperative sRAGE concentration (Spearman's Rank Correlation − 0.198 and − 0.158, p < 0.05, respectively). Patients with decreased preoperative antioxidant activity and those with depressive episodes complicated with lower postoperative antioxidant activity are at significantly higher risk of delirium after cardiac surgery development. sRAGE overexpression may be considered as protective mechanism against increased oxidative stress and subsequent cell damage.
Objective Cognitive impairment constitutes one of the major risk factors of delirium after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery; however, it is unclear whether only patients with global cognitive decline are at increased risk for delirium or if individuals with preserved global cognitive functions but impairments in specific cognitive domains are also more vulnerable to developing delirium. Thus, this study aimed to analyze the neurocognitive status of patients scheduled for CABG surgery with the use of an advanced computerized cognitive battery (CNS Vital Signs) and to investigate possible associations between impaired performance in selective cognitive areas and the risk of postoperative delirium development. Methods The study enrolled 127 participants with a median age of 67 years (IQR: 63–71). Postoperative delirium developed in 32 (25%) patients. Before surgery, the patients were screened for global cognitive impairment with the use of the Mini-Mental State Examination Test, and the individuals were asked to perform the CNS Vital Signs battery to investigate 12 specific cognitive domains. The Confusion Assessment Method and the Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale were used to screen for a diagnosis of delirium postoperatively. Results In multivariate models, a lower score of verbal memory-assessed preoperatively was independently associated with the risk of postoperative delirium development. Other independent predictors of delirium included more advanced age, gender female, depression, postoperative pyrexia, and the presence of extracorporeal circulation. Conclusions As decreased verbal memory constitutes an independent risk factor for postoperative delirium, a verbal memory test may be a useful predictor of postoperative delirium development.
Introduction Several studies have demonstrated, that one in three patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD) suffers from depression, and depression increases the likelihood for cardiac morbidity and mortality in the CVD population by 2–3-fold, independently of traditional risk factors or gender. Purpose The aim of this work is to predict depression in patients with CVD. Methods The clinical study was conducted in the cardiac surgical intensive care unit of The Central Clinical Hospital, the Medical University of Lodz in Poland, among patients scheduled for elective coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG). 224 patients signed an informed consent form, met the inclusion criteria and were enrolled in the study. All the patients had chronic coronary syndromes. The inclusion criteria were: consecutive adult patients scheduled for CABG surgery or CABG surgery with cardiac valve repair or replacement (CVR). The study population was examined by a psychiatrist the day prior to the scheduled operation, a diagnosis of major depressive disorder (MDD) was established on the basis of DSM-5 criteria. A data curation pipeline was applied to automatically remove outliers and duplicated fields in the input dataset. An AI-empowered pipeline was developed to classify patients at higher risk for depression. Random downsampling with replacement was applied to deal with the increased class imbalance by taking into consideration two confound factors, namely the Mini Mental State Examination and Hemoglobin concentration <10mg/dl. The downsampling process was repeated K times. In each iteration, three bagging and boosting ML schemas were utilized for the classification task including the AdaBoost (adaptive boosting), Random Forests and Extreme Gradient boosting trees (XGBoost). To this end, a nested cross-validation process was applied for hyperparameter optimization and model validation, where: (i) a 3-fold cross-validation process was first applied to seek for the optimal set of hyperparameters based on the grid search approach by tuning core parameters, including the learning rate, number of estimators, and max depth, among others, and (ii) a stratified 5-fold cross-validation process was subsequently used to evaluate the performance of the best model from the previous stage by computing the classification accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and area under the ROC curve (AUC). The performance evaluation results were averaged across the 5 folds and across the downsampling iterations. Shappley additive explanation analysis was finally applied to provide explainable risk factors for depression. Results sRAGE was significantly correlated with depression (r=0.32, p=0.038). The Random forests classifier presented the highest performance to predict depression (Accuracy: 0.71, Sensitivity: 0.71, Specificity: 0.75 and AUC: 0.74). Conclusions Depression can be predicted with 71% accuracy at patients with CVD and elevated sRAGE values. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – EU funding. Main funding source(s): HORIZON2020
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