METABOLIC CORRELATES OF NEUROLOGIC AND BEHAVIORAL INJURY AFTER PROLONGED HYPOTHERMIC CIRCULATORY ARREST

被引:39
|
作者
MEZROW, CK [1 ]
GANDSAS, A [1 ]
SADEGHI, AM [1 ]
MIDULLA, PS [1 ]
SHIANG, HH [1 ]
GREEN, R [1 ]
HOLZMAN, IR [1 ]
GRIEPP, RB [1 ]
机构
[1] MT SINAI MED CTR,DEPT PEDIAT,DIV NEWBORN MED,NEW YORK,NY 10029
来源
JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY | 1995年 / 109卷 / 05期
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0022-5223(95)70322-5
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Thirty-two inbred weanling puppies were divided into four groups to study the effect on cerebral blood flow and metabolism of different hypothermic strategies for cerebral protection similar to those used during cardiac operations in infancy. All animals were cooled to 18 degrees C. The animals in the hypothermic control group were immediately rewarmed. One group underwent 30 minutes of hypothermic circulatory arrest at 18 degrees C; another group had 90 minutes of hypothermic circulatory arrest at 18 degrees C, and the final group had low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass (25 ml/kg per minute) at 18 degrees C for 90 minutes. All animals had preoperative and postoperative neurologic and behavioral evaluation and extensive intraoperative monitoring of cerebral blood flow, cerebral vascular resistance, and oxygen and glucose uptake and metabolism: quantitative electroencephalography was also monitored before, during, and after operation, but those results are reported separately. Two animals in the 90-minute arrest group died, and all the survivors showed evidence of clinical, neurologic, and behavioral impairment on postoperative day 1, with residual abnormalities in all but one animal on day 6. In contrast, the survivors in all the other groups showed no significant clinical or behavioral sequelae. Cerebral metabolism was reduced only to 32% to 40% of baseline values at 18 degrees C in all groups, although systemic metabolism was only 16% of normal. Cerebral metabolism returned promptly to baseline in all groups during rewarming and remained at baseline levels throughout the 8 hours of follow-up. Cerebral blood flow showed marked hyperemia in the hypothermic arrest groups during rewarming but then significant reductions below baseline values in all groups except the controls at 2 and 4 hours after the operation, lasting as late as 8 hours after the operation in the 90-minute arrest group. Cerebral vascular resistance showed increases in all groups at 2 and 4 hours after the operation, which persisted in the 90-minute arrest group at 8 hours. Cerebral metabolism was maintained at baseline levels despite postoperative decreases in cerebral blood flow and increases in cerebral vascular resistance by increases in oxygen and glucose extraction. The result was very low sagittal sinus oxygen saturations in all groups, most marked in the 90-minute arrest groups, which had a saturation of only 24% 8 hours after the operation. Our data show a severe, prolonged disturbance in cerebral blood flow and cerebral vascular resistance after 90 minutes of hypothermic circulatory arrest at 18 degrees C, which correlates with clinical evidence of cerebral injury. The presence of similar but milder inappropriate hemodynamic responses in animals after 30 minutes of arrest at 18 degrees C, and even after prolonged low-flow cardiopulmonary bypass at 18 degrees C, suggest that strategies to improve cerebral protection during hypothermia-including use of colder temperatures-need to be explored.
引用
收藏
页码:959 / 975
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Neurologic sequelae of deep hypothermic circulatory arrest in cardiac transplant infants
    Eke, CC
    Gundry, SR
    Baum, MF
    Chinnock, RE
    Razzouk, AJ
    Bailey, LL
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 1996, 61 (03): : 783 - 787
  • [22] Prevention of post-hypothermic circulatory arrest temporary neurologic deficits
    Miyamoto, TA
    Miyamoto, KJ
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2000, 70 (05): : 1764 - 1765
  • [23] Temperature management after hypothermic circulatory arrest
    Coselli, JS
    LeMaire, SA
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2002, 123 (04): : 621 - 623
  • [24] Oxygenation strategy and neurologic damage after deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. II. Hypoxic versus free radical injury
    Nollert, G
    Nagashima, M
    Bucerius, J
    Shin'oka, T
    Lidov, HGW
    du Plessis, A
    Jonas, RA
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 1999, 117 (06): : 1172 - 1179
  • [25] Clinical neurologic and developmental studies after cardiac surgery utilizing hypothermic circulatory arrest and cardiopulmonary bypass
    Wernovsky, G
    Jonas, RA
    Hickey, PR
    duPlessis, AJ
    Newburger, JW
    ANESTHESIOLOGY AND THE CARDIOVASCULAR PATIENT, 1996, 31 : 247 - 264
  • [26] Neurologic outcome after cardiopulmonary bypass with deep hypothermic circulatory arrest in rats: Description of a new model
    Jungwirth, B
    Mackensen, GB
    Blobner, M
    Neff, F
    Reichart, B
    Kochs, EF
    Nollert, G
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2006, 131 (04): : 805 - 812
  • [27] Temperature Variation After Rewarming from Deep Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest Is Associated with Survival and Neurologic Outcome
    Rungatscher, Alessio
    Luciani, Giovanni Battista
    Linardi, Daniele
    Milani, Elisabetta
    Gottin, Leonardo
    Walpoth, Beat
    Faggian, Giuseppe
    THERAPEUTIC HYPOTHERMIA AND TEMPERATURE MANAGEMENT, 2017, 7 (02) : 101 - 106
  • [28] EEG burst recovery is predictive of brain injury after experimental hypothermic circulatory arrest
    Pokela, M
    Jäntti, V
    Lepola, P
    Romsi, P
    Rimpiläinen, J
    Kiviluoma, K
    Salomäki, T
    Vainionpää, V
    Biancari, F
    Hirvonen, J
    Kaakinen, T
    Juvonen, T
    SCANDINAVIAN CARDIOVASCULAR JOURNAL, 2003, 37 (03) : 154 - 157
  • [29] Remote Ischemic Preconditioning Protects the Brain Against Injury After Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest
    Jensen, Hanna A.
    Loukogeorgakis, Stavros
    Yannopoulos, Fredrik
    Rimpilainen, Eija
    Petzold, Axel
    Tuominen, Hannu
    Lepola, Pasi
    MacAllister, Raymond J.
    Deanfield, John E.
    Makela, Tuomas
    Alestalo, Kirsi
    Kiviluoma, Kai
    Anttila, Vesa
    Tsang, Victor
    Juvonen, Tatu
    CIRCULATION, 2011, 123 (07) : 714 - 721
  • [30] Postoperative hypoxemia exacerbates potential brain injury after deep hypothermic circulatory arrest
    Tsui, SSL
    Schultz, JM
    Shen, I
    Ungerleider, RM
    ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2004, 78 (01): : 188 - 196