Literature DB >> 11518829

Twenty-four hours of mild hypothermia in unsedated newborn pigs starting after a severe global hypoxic-ischemic insult is not neuroprotective.

M Thoresen1, S Satas, E M Løberg, A Whitelaw, D Acolet, C Lindgren, J Penrice, N Robertson, E Haug, P A Steen.   

Abstract

Three to 12 h of mild hypothermia (HT) starting after hypoxia-ischemia is neuroprotective in piglets that are anesthetized during HT. Newborn infants suffering from neonatal encephalopathy often ventilate spontaneously and are not necessarily sedated. We aimed to test whether mild posthypoxic HT lasting 24 h was neuroprotective if the animals were not sedated. Thirty-nine piglets (median weight 1.6 kg, range 0.8-2.2 kg; median age 24 h, range 7-48 h) were anesthetized and ventilated and subjected to a 45-min hypoxic (FiO(2) approximately 6%) global insult (n = 36) or sham hypoxia (n = 3). On reoxygenation, 18 were maintained normothermic (NT, 39.0 degrees C) for 72 h, and 21 were cooled from 39 (NT) to 35 degrees C (HT) for the first 24 h before NT was resumed (18 experimental, three sham hypoxia). Cardiovascular parameters and intermittent EEG were documented throughout. The brain was perfusion fixed for neuropathology and five main areas examined using light microscopy. The insult severity (duration in minutes of EEG amplitude < 7 microV) was similar in the NT and HT groups, mean +/- SD (28 +/- 7.2 versus 27 +/- 8.6 min), as was the mean FiO(2) (5.9 +/- 0.7 versus 5.8 +/- 0.8%) during the insult. Six NT and seven HT piglets developed posthypoxic seizures that lasted 29 and 30% of the time, respectively. The distribution and degree of injury (0.0-4.0, normal-maximal damage) within the brain (hippocampus, cortex/white matter, cerebellum, basal ganglia, thalamus) were similar in the NT and HT groups (overall score, mean +/- SD, 2.3 +/- 1.5 versus 2.4 +/- 1.3) as was the EEG background amplitude at 3 h (13 +/- 3.5 versus 10 +/- 3.3 microV). The HT animals shivered and were more active. The sham control group (n = 3) shivered but had normal physiology and neuropathology. Plasma cortisol was significantly higher in the HT group during the HT period, 766 +/- 277 versus 244 +/- 144 microM at 24 h. Mild postinsult HT for 24 h was not neuroprotective in unsedated piglets and did not reduce the number of animals that developed posthypoxic seizures. Cortisol reached 3 times the NT value at the end of HT. We speculate that the stress of shivering and feeling cold interfered with the previously shown neuroprotective effect of HT. Research on the appropriateness of sedation during clinical HT is urgent.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11518829     DOI: 10.1203/00006450-200109000-00017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Res        ISSN: 0031-3998            Impact factor:   3.756


  40 in total

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2.  Preemptive Morphine During Therapeutic Hypothermia After Neonatal Encephalopathy: A Secondary Analysis.

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3.  Intranasal perfluorochemical spray for preferential brain cooling in sheep.

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4.  Therapeutic Hypothermia After Cardiac Arrest.

Authors:  Sunjeet S Sidhu; Steven P Schulman; John W McEvoy
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5.  Early antioxidant treatment and delayed hypothermia after hypoxia-ischemia have no additive neuroprotection in newborn pigs.

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Review 6.  Emerging therapies and management for neonatal encephalopathy-controversies and current approaches.

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7.  Perinatal asphyxia in a nonhuman primate model.

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8.  Significant head cooling can be achieved while maintaining normothermia in the newborn piglet.

Authors:  J R Tooley; R C Eagle; S Satas; M Thoresen
Journal:  Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 5.747

Review 9.  Bench to cribside: the path for developing a neuroprotectant.

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Review 10.  Perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury in large animal models: Relevance to human neonatal encephalopathy.

Authors:  Raymond C Koehler; Zeng-Jin Yang; Jennifer K Lee; Lee J Martin
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2018-08-28       Impact factor: 6.200

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