| Literature DB >> 26441818 |
Joanne O Davidson1, Guido Wassink1, Lotte G van den Heuij1, Laura Bennet1, Alistair J Gunn1.
Abstract
Hypoxia-ischemia before or around the time of birth occurs in approximately 2/1000 live births and is associated with a high risk of death or lifelong disability. Therapeutic hypothermia is now well established as standard treatment for infants with moderate to severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy but is only partially effective. There is compelling preclinical and clinical evidence that hypothermia is most protective when it is started as early as possible after hypoxia-ischemia. Further improvements in outcome from therapeutic hypothermia are very likely to arise from strategies to reduce the delay before starting treatment of affected infants. In this review, we examine evidence that current protocols are reasonably close to the optimal depth and duration of cooling, but that the optimal rate of rewarming after hypothermia is unclear. The potential for combination treatments to augment hypothermic neuroprotection has considerable promise, particularly with endogenous targets such as melatonin and erythropoietin, and noble gases such as xenon. We dissect the critical importance of preclinical studies using realistic delays in treatment and clinically relevant cooling protocols when examining combination treatment, and that for many strategies overlapping mechanisms of action can substantially attenuate any effects.Entities:
Keywords: brain; hypothermia; hypoxia–ischemia; ischemia; neonate; neuroprotection
Year: 2015 PMID: 26441818 PMCID: PMC4568393 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Mechanisms of evolving neural injury in the primary phase, latent phase, secondary phase, and tertiary phase that contribute to long-term brain damage and disability.
Summary of the evidence for additive neuroprotective effects with hypothermia and potential combination treatments.
| Combination treatment | Species | Age | Additive effects | Hypothermia started | Other intervention started | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Erythropoietin | Non-human primates ( | Full term | Yes (survival, motor, cognitive responses, cerebellar growth, and MRI) | Immediately | 30 min | Hypothermia for 72 h |
| Neonatal rat ( | P7 | No (sensorimotor, histopathology) | 1 h | Immediately | Hypothermia for 8 h | |
| Neonatal rat ( | P7 | Borderline (sensorimotor, histopathology) | Immediately | Immediately | Hypothermia for 3 h | |
| Stem cells | Neonatal rat ( | P7 | Yes (histology, MRI, functional) | 6 h | 6 h | Hypothermia: 32°C for 24 h |
| Melatonin | Newborn piglet ( | Full-term | Yes (MRS, histology) | 2 h | 10 min | Hypothermia for 26 h |
| IGF-I | Fetal sheep ( | 0.85 gestation (term equivalent) | No (EEG and histology) | 5.5 h | 4.5 h | Hypothermia for 72 h |
| Xenon | Neonatal rats ( | P7 | Yes (histology, functional) | 4 h | 4 h | Hypothermia for 90 min |
| Newborn piglet ( | Term | Yes (neuropathology, clinical neurology) | <40 min | 30 min | Hypothermia for 12–24 h | |
| Newborn piglet ( | Term | No (trend, MRS, histology) | 2 h | 2 h | Hypothermia for 24 h | |
| Humans ( | Term | Yes (seizures only) | <12 h | <12 h | Reduced seizures | |
| Phenobarbital | Neonatal rats ( | P7 | Yes (histology, MRI, functional) | 1–3 h | 15 min | Hypothermia: 30°C for 3 h |
| Dizocilpine | Fetal sheep ( | 0.7 gestation | No (EEG and histology) | 5.5 h | 15 min | Hypothermia for 72 h |
| Cx43 mimetic proteins | Fetal sheep ( | 0.85 gestation (term equivalent) | No (EEG and histology) | 3 h | 3 h | Hypothermia for 72 h |
Cx43, connexin 43; EEG, electroencephalography; IGF-I, insulin-like growth factor I; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; functional, neurobehavioral tests.