Literature DB >> 12637048

Cerebral blood flow and dynamic cerebral autoregulation during ethanol intoxication and hypercapnia.

Martin Blaha1, Rune Aaslid, Colleen M Douville, Reinaldo Correra, David W Newell.   

Abstract

More than one-third of patients diagnosed with head injury are intoxicated with ethanol. Most clinical and animal studies have shown alcohol to have a deleterious impact in the setting of cerebrovascular trauma; however, there are also data showing neuroprotective effects in low ethanol doses. Human studies using imaging modalities suggest that small doses of alcohol produce cerebral vasodilatation and higher doses cerebral vasoconstriction. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of ethanol intake on dynamic cerebral autoregulation and velocities in the middle cerebral arteries, and compare these changes with the effects of hypercapnia. Dynamic cerebral autoregulation and cerebral blood flow velocities were analysed before and after alcohol intake (1.1 g/kg of body weight) in six adult volunteers. Cerebral blood flow velocities in both middle cerebral arteries were monitored continuously by transcranial Doppler. A value for dynamic cerebral autoregulation was calculated from the rate of increase in middle cerebral artery velocities after a rapid-step decrease in arterial blood pressure. A sudden decrease in blood pressure was achieved by the release of previously inflated large blood pressure cuffs around the subject's thighs. Three volunteers were also tested before alcohol intake with CO(2) challenge (breathing 6% CO(2)) during the autoregulation procedure. Blood alcohol level reached 90 mg/dl approximately 60 min after ethanol ingestion. Cerebral blood velocities increased by 8% from baseline for uncorrected end-tidal (et) CO(2) and by 24% for correction to et CO(2)=40. Dynamic cerebral autoregulation measured as an autoregulation index decreased from 4.3+/-1.3 to 2.9+/-1.1 (p=0.089), which did not reach statistical significance. During hypercapnic conditions, dynamic cerebral autoregulation dropped from 4+/-0.8 to 0.9+/-0.9. In conclusion, mild alcohol intoxication caused cerebral vasodilatation with a subsequent increase in cerebral blood flow of 8-24%. Dynamic cerebral autoregulation was not found to be significantly impaired by ethanol. Hypercapnia almost completely destroys the physiological autoregulatory mechanism. A mild hyper-ventilation to etCO(2)=34-36 may be a compensatory contra-measure for ethanol-induced vasodilatation in the setting of head trauma.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12637048     DOI: 10.1016/s0967-5868(02)00126-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Neurosci        ISSN: 0967-5868            Impact factor:   1.961


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