Literature DB >> 17205016

Hyperventilation following head injury: effect on ischemic burden and cerebral oxidative metabolism.

Jonathan P Coles1, Tim D Fryer, Martin R Coleman, Peter Smielewski, Arun K Gupta, Pawan S Minhas, Franklin Aigbirhio, Doris A Chatfield, Guy B Williams, Simon Boniface, T Adrian Carpenter, John C Clark, John D Pickard, David K Menon.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether hyperventilation exacerbates cerebral ischemia and compromises oxygen metabolism (CMRO2) following closed head injury.
DESIGN: A prospective interventional study.
SETTING: A specialist neurocritical care unit. PATIENTS: Ten healthy volunteers and 30 patients within 10 days of closed head injury.
INTERVENTIONS: Subjects underwent oxygen-15 positron emission tomography imaging of cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, CMRO2, and oxygen extraction fraction. In patients, positron emission tomography studies, somatosensory evoked potentials, and jugular venous saturation (SjO2) measurements were obtained at Paco2 levels of 36+/-3 and 29+/-2 torr.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We estimated the volume of ischemic brain and examined the efficiency of coupling between oxygen delivery and utilization using the sd of the oxygen extraction fraction distribution. We correlated CMRO2 to cerebral electrophysiology and examined the effects of hyperventilation on the amplitude of the cortical somatosensory evoked potential response. Patients showed higher ischemic brain volume than controls (17+/-22 vs. 2+/-3 mL; p<or=.05), with worse matching of oxygen delivery to demand (p<.001). Hyperventilation consistently reduced cerebral blood flow (p<.001) and resulted in increases in oxygen extraction fraction and ischemic brain volume (17+/-22 vs. 88+/-66 mL; p<.0001), which were undetected by SjO2 monitoring. Mean CMRO2 was slightly increased following hyperventilation, but responses were extremely variable, with 28% of patients demonstrating a decrease in CMRO2 that exceeded 95% prediction intervals for zero change in one or more regions. CMRO2 correlated with cerebral electrophysiology, and cortical somatosensory evoked potential amplitudes were significantly increased by hyperventilation.
CONCLUSIONS: The acute cerebral blood flow reduction and increase in CMRO2 secondary to hyperventilation represent physiologic challenges to the traumatized brain. These challenges exhaust physiologic reserves in a proportion of brain regions in many subjects and compromise oxidative metabolism. Such ischemia is underestimated by common bedside monitoring tools and may represent a significant mechanism of avoidable neuronal injury following head trauma.

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Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17205016     DOI: 10.1097/01.CCM.0000254066.37187.88

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  51 in total

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