| Literature DB >> 25346332 |
Sven Poli, Jan Purrucker, Miriam Priglinger, Matthias Ebner, Marek Sykora, Jennifer Diedler, Cem Bulut, Erik Popp, André Rupp, Christian Hametner.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Induction methods for therapeutic cooling are under investigated. We compared the effectiveness and safety of cold infusions (CI) and nasopharyngeal cooling (NPC) for cooling induction in stroke patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25346332 PMCID: PMC4234831 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-014-0582-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Inclusion/exclusion criteria
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| ○ Ischaemic or haemorrhagic stroke | ○ Severe cardiac insufficiency (NYHA ≥ III) |
| ○ ICP/temperature brain probe | ○ Acute myocardial infarction or pulmonary embolism |
| ○ Indication for therapeutic cooling independent of the study | ○ Threatened ventricular dysrhythmia or cardiac dysrhythmia (heart rate <50/min, QTc >450 ms, sick sinus syndrome, AV block II-III°) |
| ○ Sedation, intubation, and mechanical ventilation | ○ Chronic sinusitis or current or past fracture or surgery of the paranasal sinuses not allowing secure application of nasopharyngeal cooling |
| ○ Age ≥18 years | ○ Severe infection with bacteraemia or sepsis ≤72 h |
| ○ Written informed consent by patient or legal representative | ○ Fever >38.5°C |
| ○ Severe renal or liver insufficiency | |
| ○ Known haematologic disease with increased risk of thrombosis (e.g., cryoglobulinaemia, cold agglutinins or sickle cell anaemia) | |
| ○ Known vasospastic vascular disorder (e.g., Raynaud phenomenon or thromboangiitis obliterans) | |
| ○ Body weight >120 kg |
Figure 1Study flow chart.
Baseline characteristics and outcomes
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| Patients; number | 10 | 10 | |
| Female; number (%) | 4 (40%) | 5 (50%) | n.s.a |
| Age, years; mean ± STD | 65.4 ± 7.4 | 55.7 ± 11.5 | 0.038b |
| Weight, kg | 83.5 ± 17.7 | 80.3 ± 12.7 | n.s.b |
| Height, cm | 173.1 ± 10.1 | 172 ± 10 | n.s.b |
| Body mass index, kg/m2 | 27.9 ± 5.9 | 27.3 ± 2.4 | n.s.b |
| Body surface aread, m2 | 2 ± 0.2 | 2 ± 0.2 | n.s.b |
| Time from symptom onset to treatment, hours | 69.4 ± 25.2 | 67.1 ± 31.9 | n.s.b |
| Stroke type; number (%) | n.s.a | ||
| Ischaemic | 7 (70%) | 4 (40%) | |
| ICH | 2 (20%) | 5 (50%) | |
| SAH | 1 (10%) | 1 (10%) | |
| Scores | |||
| Premorbid mRS; number (%) | n.s.c | ||
| 0 | 7 (70%) | 7 (70%) | |
| 1 | 2 (20%) | 2 (20%) | |
| 2 | 1 (10%) | 1 (10%) | |
| NIHSS admission; median (IQR) | 14.5 (6.75-24.75) | 26.5 (17.5-38) | n.s.c |
| mRS follow-up median (IQR) | 4.5 (3.75-6) | 4.5 (3–6) | n.s.c |
| Risk factors; number (%) | |||
| Diabetes mellitus | 0 (0%) | 3 (30%) | n.s.a |
| Arterial hypertension | 8 (80%) | 8 (80%) | n.s.a |
| Hypercholesterolaemia | 0 (0%) | 1 (10%) | n.s.a |
| Atrial fibrillation | 2 (20%) | 0 (0%) | n.s.a |
aFisher's exact test; bStudent’s t-test; cMann–Whitney U test.; dMosteller formula. ICH, intracerebral haemorrhage; IQR, interquartile range; mRS, modified Rankin Scale; NIHSS, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale; n.s. non-significant; SAH, subarachnoid haemorrhage; STD, standard deviation.
Figure 2Brain and body temperatures. A) Mean brain temperature curves for CI (n = 10) versus NPC (n = 10) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (grey shading). B, C) Mean curves of all body temperature measurements in comparison with brain temperature during treatment with CI (B) and NPC (C). Sampling rate for all data acquisition was 1/minute.
Figure 3Neurovital and respiratory parameters. A, B) Mean curves of neurovital parameters during CI (A; n = 10), and NPC (B; n = 10). SAP, systolic arterial pressure; CPP, cerebral perfusion pressure; ICP, intracranial pressure; HR, heart rate. C) Mean inspiratory tidal volume curves for CI (n = 9) versus NPC (n = 9) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (grey shading); respiratory data were not available for one patient in each interventional group. Sampling rate for all data acquisition was 1/minute.
Intervention-related AE
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| 2 | CI | Ischaemic | No | - | - |
| 3 | CI | Ischaemic | BSAS 3 | II | Yes |
| 4 | CI | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +42 mmHg, SAP 186 mmHg | III | Noa |
| 6 | CI | ICH | ∆SAP +33 mmHg | III | No |
| 9 | CI | ICH | ∆SAP +43 mmHg | III | No |
| 13 | CI | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +39 mmHg, ICP 27 mmHg | II | Yes |
| 15 | CI | Ischaemic | No | - | - |
| 16 | CI | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +43 mmHg | III | No |
| 17 | CI | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +28 mmHg | III | No |
| 19 | CI | SAH | ∆SAP +18 mmHg, SAP 165 mmHg | IV | Yes |
| 1 | NPC | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +35 mmHg | I | No |
| 5 | NPC | ICH | No | - | - |
| 7 | NPC | ICH | BSAS 3 | I | Yes |
| 8 | NPC | SAH | ∆SAP +14 mmHg, SAP 160 mmHg | I | Yes |
| 10 | NPC | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +28 mmHg, SAP 187 mmHg | I | Yes |
| 11 | NPC | ICH | ∆SAP +40 mmHg | I | No |
| 12 | NPC | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +51 mmHg, ICP 27 mmHg | I | Yes |
| 14 | NPC | ICH | No | - | - |
| 18 | NPC | ICH | No | - | - |
| 20 | NPC | Ischaemic | ∆SAP +25 mmHg | I | No |
aSAP rose to 186 mmHg, but resolved spontaneously before treatment was initiated. Intervention-related AE of neurovital parameters for each patient, with the time of occurrence (subperiods I to IV), and whether or not the AE was treated. Treatment was indicated if SAP or ICP was higher than the predefined critical value (SAP ischaemic stroke ≥180 mmHg, haemorrhagic stroke ≥160 mmHg; ICP ≥20 mmHg), or the BSAS score was ≥1. ∆SAP indicates maximum delta SAP compared to baseline. BSAS, Bedside Shivering Assessment Scale; ICH, intracerebral haemorrhage; ICP, intracranial pressure; SAH, subarachnoid haemorrhage; SAP, systolic arterial pressure.