Cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular autoregulation in a swine model of pediatric cardiac arrest and hypothermia

被引:89
|
作者
Lee, Jennifer K. [1 ]
Brady, Ken M. [1 ]
Mytar, Jennifer O. [1 ]
Kibler, Kathleen K. [1 ]
Carter, Erin L. [1 ]
Hirsch, Karen G. [2 ]
Hogue, Charles W. [1 ]
Easley, Ronald B. [1 ]
Jordan, Lori C. [2 ,3 ]
Smielewski, Peter [4 ]
Czosnyka, Marek [4 ]
Shaffner, Donald H. [1 ]
Koehler, Raymond C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Anesthesiol & Crit Care Med, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
[2] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurol, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA
[3] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Div Pediat Neurol, Baltimore, MD USA
[4] Addenbrookes Hosp, Dept Acad Neurosurg, Cambridge, England
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
blood pressure; cerebrovascular circulation; heart arrest; hypothermia; ischemia; pediatrics; NEAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY; INTRACRANIAL-PRESSURE; LASER-DOPPLER; NEWBORN PIGS; BRAIN-INJURY; FETAL LAMB; HYPOTENSION; HYPOXIA; SCIENCE; PIGLET;
D O I
10.1097/CCM.0b013e318223b910
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Objective: Knowledge remains limited regarding cerebral blood flow autoregulation after cardiac arrest and during postresuscitation hypothermia. We determined the relationship of cerebral blood flow to cerebral perfusion pressure in a swine model of pediatric hypoxic-asphyxic cardiac arrest during normothermia and hypothermia and tested novel measures of autoregulation derived from near-infrared spectroscopy. Design: Prospective, balanced animal study. Setting: Basic physiology laboratory at an academic institution. Subjects: Eighty-four neonatal swine. Interventions: Piglets underwent hypoxic-asphyxic cardiac arrest or sham surgery and recovered for 2 hrs with normothermia followed by 4 hrs of either moderate hypothermia or normothermia. In half of the groups, blood pressure was slowly decreased through inflation of a balloon catheter in the inferior vena cava to identify the lower limit of cerebral autoregulation at 6 hrs postresuscitation. In the remaining groups, blood pressure was gradually increased by inflation of a balloon catheter in the aorta to determine the autoregulatory response to hypertension. Measures of autoregulation obtained from standard laser-Doppler flowmetry and indices derived from near-infrared spectroscopy were compared. Measurements and Main Results: Laser-Doppler flux was lower in postarrest animals compared to sham-operated controls during the 2-hr normothermic period after resuscitation. During the subsequent 4-hr recovery, hypothermia decreased laser-Doppler flux in both the sham surgery and postarrest groups. Autoregulation was intact during hypertension in all groups. With arterial hypotension, postarrest, hypothermic piglets had a significant decrease in the perfusion pressure lower limit of autoregulation compared to postarrest, normothermic piglets. The near-infrared spectroscopy-derived measures of autoregulation accurately detected loss of autoregulation during hypotension. Conclusions: In a pediatric model of cardiac arrest and resuscitation, delayed induction of hypothermia decreased cerebral perfusion and decreased the lower limit of autoregulation. Metrics derived from noninvasive near-infrared spectroscopy accurately identified the lower limit of autoregulation during normothermia and hypothermia in piglets resuscitated from arrest. (Crit Care Med 2011; 39:2337-2345)
引用
收藏
页码:2337 / 2345
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Differences in optical metrics of cerebral autoregulation after pediatric cardiac arrest
    Hurlock, April
    Seeney, Alyssa
    Ranieri, Nicolina
    Burnett, Ryan
    Douglas, Rebecca
    Majmudar, Tanmay
    Goto, Rika
    Forti, Rodrigo Menezes
    Lynch, Jennifer
    Baker, Wesley
    Topjian, Alexis
    Berg, Robert
    Ko, Tiffany
    Kirschen, Matthew
    CIRCULATION, 2024, 150
  • [22] Monitoring Cerebral Blood Flow Pressure Autoregulation in Pediatric Patients During Cardiac Surgery
    Brady, Ken M.
    Mytar, Jennifer O.
    Lee, Jennifer K.
    Cameron, Duke E.
    Vricella, Luca A.
    Thompson, W. Reid
    Hogue, Charles W.
    Easley, R. Blaine
    STROKE, 2010, 41 (09) : 1957 - 1962
  • [23] Cerebrovascular autoregulation after rewarming from hypothermia in a neonatal swine model of asphyxic brain injury
    Larson, Abby C.
    Jamrogowicz, Jessica L.
    Kulikowicz, Ewa
    Wang, Bing
    Yang, Zeng-Jin
    Shaffner, Donald H.
    Koehler, Raymond C.
    Lee, Jennifer K.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 115 (10) : 1433 - 1442
  • [24] Correlation of Cerebral Blood Flow and Apparent Diffusion Coefficient in Pediatric Cardiac Arrest
    Manchester, Leah
    Fink, Ericka
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2013, 41 (12)
  • [25] Effects of therapeutic hypothermia on cerebral tissue oxygen saturation in a swine model of post-cardiac arrest
    Wu, Chunshuang
    Xu, Jiefeng
    Jin, Xiaohong
    Chen, Qijiang
    Lu, Xiao
    Qian, Anyu
    Wang, Moli
    Li, Zilong
    Zhang, Mao
    EXPERIMENTAL AND THERAPEUTIC MEDICINE, 2020, 19 (02) : 1189 - 1196
  • [26] Noninvasive cerebral cooling in a swine model of cardiac arrest
    Tadler, SC
    Callaway, CW
    Menegazzi, JJ
    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 1998, 5 (01) : 25 - 30
  • [27] An effective model of cerebrovascular pressure reactivity and blood flow autoregulation
    Acosta, Sebastian
    Penny, Daniel J.
    Brady, Ken M.
    Rusin, Craig G.
    MICROVASCULAR RESEARCH, 2018, 115 : 34 - 43
  • [28] Cerebral Perfusion and Cerebral Autoregulation after Cardiac Arrest
    van den Brule, J. M. D.
    van der Hoeven, J. G.
    Hoedemaekers, C. W. E.
    BIOMED RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL, 2018, 2018
  • [29] An Anatomical Model of the Cerebral Vasculature and the Autoregulation of Cerebral Blood Flow
    Lucas, C.
    Payne, S. J.
    6TH WORLD CONGRESS OF BIOMECHANICS (WCB 2010), PTS 1-3, 2010, 31 : 446 - 449
  • [30] Cerebral blood flow after cardiac arrest
    Buunk, G
    van der Hoeven, JG
    Meinders, AE
    NETHERLANDS JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2000, 57 (03): : 106 - 112