| Literature DB >> 26448873 |
F A Zeiler1, N Sader2, C J Kazina1.
Abstract
Background. The goal of our study was to perform a systematic review of the literature to determine the effect that intravenous (IV) lidocaine had on ICP in patients with neurological illness. Methods. All articles are from MEDLINE, BIOSIS, EMBASE, Global Health, Scopus, Cochrane Library, the International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (inception to March 2015). The strength of evidence was adjudicated using both the Oxford and GRADE methodology. Results. Ten original articles were considered for the final review. There were 189 patients studied. Seven studies focused on prophylactic pretreatment with IV lidocaine to determine if there would be an attenuation of ICP spikes during stimulation, with 4 displaying an attenuation of ICP. Three studies focused on a therapeutic administration of IV lidocaine in order to determine ICP reduction effects. All therapeutic studies displayed a reduction in ICP. Conclusions. We cannot make a strong definitive recommendation on the effectiveness of IV lidocaine on the attenuation of ICP spikes during stimulation. There currently exists both Oxford 2b and GRADE B literature to support and refute the attenuation of ICP spikes with IV lidocaine during stimulation. There currently exists Oxford 2b, GRADE B evidence to support ICP reduction with lidocaine when used as a therapeutic agent.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26448873 PMCID: PMC4581506 DOI: 10.1155/2015/485802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1305
Figure 1Flow diagram of search results.
Study characteristics and patient demographics.
| Reference | Number of patients | Study type | Article location | Mean age (years) | Patient characteristics | Primary and secondary goal of study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bedford et al. [ | 20 | Prospective nonrandomized | Manuscript |
| Brain tumors undergoing elective resection having sustained ICP elevations for >30 sec after induction |
|
|
| ||||||
| Bedford et al. [ | 20 | Prospective randomized control trial | Meeting abstract |
| Brain tumors undergoing elective resection |
|
|
| ||||||
|
Donegan and Bedford [ | 10 | Prospective cohort | Manuscript | Unknown | Severe TBI with ICP > 20 mm Hg during suctioning |
|
|
| ||||||
|
| 9 | Prospective cohort | Meeting abstract | Unknown | Severe TBI with ICP > 20 mm Hg during suctioning |
|
|
| ||||||
| Grover et al. [ | 30 | Prospective randomized trial | Manuscript | Age > 5 years | Clinically raised ICP and undergoing VPS surgery |
|
|
| ||||||
| Hamill et al. [ | 22 | Prospective randomized trial | Manuscript | Unknown | Brain tumors undergoing elective resection |
|
|
| ||||||
| Hirayama et al. [ | 21 patients | Prospective nonrandomized | Meeting abstract | Unknown | “Postoperative” neurosurgery patients |
|
|
| ||||||
| Montarry et al. [ | 20 | Prospective cohort | Manuscript | 32 | Severe TBI |
|
|
| ||||||
| Samaha et al. [ | 22 | Prospective randomized trial | Manuscript |
| Elective neurosurgical patients (tumors and aneurysm clippings) |
|
|
| ||||||
| White et al. [ | 15 | Prospective cohort | Manuscript | Unknown | Severe TBI with elevations of ICP > 20 mm Hg during or immediately after suctioning |
|
|
| ||||||
| Yano et al. [ | 9 | Prospective cohort | Manuscript | 34.6 (range: 16 to 71) | Severe TBI |
|
n = number of patients, HR = heart rate, MABP = mean arterial blood pressure, ICP = intracranial pressure, CPP = cerebral perfusion pressure, CSF = cerebrospinal fluid, mm Hg = millimeters of mercury, IV = intravenous, LT = laryngotracheal, TBI = traumatic brain injury, LD = lumbar drain, and sec = second. Donegan and Bedford [8] and Donegan et al. [9] are companion publications, with Donegan et al. [9] representing the meeting abstract published prior to the full manuscript [8]. The data from Donegan et al. [9] is not included in the synthesis of data and is only included in the tables for completeness.
Lidocaine treatment characteristics and ICP response.
| Reference | Lidocaine dose | Mean duration of lidocaine administration (days) | ICP response | Other primary/secondary outcomes | Adverse effects to lidocaine | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bedford et al. [ | 1.5 mg/kg IV bolus x1 ( | Single bolus dose |
| Mean MABP decrease of 26 mm Hg with thiopental | None described | Lidocaine and thiopental are equally an effect in reduction of ICP via IV bolus, with lidocaine preserving systemic hemodynamics |
|
| ||||||
| Bedford et al. [ | 1.5 mg/kg IV bolus x1 ( | Single bolus dose | Pretreatment with IV lidocaine led to a maximum mean ICP increase of 6 mm Hg and 4 mm Hg at 30 and 60 sec | MABP increase was less with lidocaine compared to placebo | None described | IV lidocaine during laryngoscopy leads to an attenuation of ICP elevation compared to saline. |
|
| ||||||
| Donegan and Bedford [ | 1.5 mg/kg IV bolus x1 | Single bolus dose | Lidocaine presuction led to a mean increase in ICP of 3.4 ± 6.2 mm Hg and 1.8 ± 2.6 mm Hg in those on and off barbiturates during suctioning | No significant difference in MABP changes during suctioning | None described | Lidocaine presuctioning leads to an attenuation of ICP elevations compared to saline |
|
| ||||||
|
| 1.5 mg/kg IV bolus x1 | Single bolus dose | Lidocaine pretreatment led to a significant attenuation in ICP elevation with suctioning | Not stated | None described | Lidocaine presuctioning leads to an attenuation of ICP elevations compared to saline |
|
| ||||||
| Grover et al. [ | Three groups: | Single bolus dose | All groups displayed a significant decrease in ICP within 2 min of lidocaine administration | Group 3 was the only group to display significant drop in SBP | SBP decreased with 2 mg/kg IV bolus dose | IV lidocaine bolus leads to significant reductions in ICP High lidocaine dosing may lead to drops in SBP |
|
| ||||||
| Hamill et al. [ | LT ( | Single dose | IV lidocaine led to a significant decrease in baseline ICP with no elevations during laryngoscopy | Significant HR and MABP increase in LT group | None described | IV lidocaine led to decrease in baseline ICP and attenuated ICP elevations during laryngoscopy |
|
| ||||||
| Hirayama et al. [ | All had dexamethasone and glycerin, with | Continuous infusion | The addition of lidocaine to glycerin therapy led to a reduction in ICP spikes, with a mean reduction in ICP of 8.9 mm Hg over 24 hours | Not stated | None described | Both IV lidocaine and nitroglycerin in the presence of glycerin therapy lead to ICP reductions at 24 hours |
|
| ||||||
| Montarry et al. [ | All patients underwent suctioning without lidocaine, then with IV, and finally with LT | Single dose | No difference in the ICP over 6 min for no lidocaine, or either of the lidocaine routes, during suctioning. | No difference in CPP | Not described | Lidocaine IV or LT did not lead to a suppression of ICP during suctioning |
|
| ||||||
| Samaha et al. [ |
| Single dose | Postintubation ICP rose significantly in both groups | Significant decrease in CPP in both groups during intubation | Not described | Both lidocaine and esmolol failed to attenuate the elevation in CPP and ICP after intubation |
|
| ||||||
| White et al. [ | Every patient received all treatments during individual suctioning episodes | Single bolus dose | Lidocaine/succinylcholine IV and thiopental lead to a mean decrease in ICP by 4–6 mm Hg but had no effect on the ICP during suctioning | MABP not affected by any regimen | None described | Lidocaine IV leads to ICP reduction but not attenuation of cough mediated ICP spikes |
|
| ||||||
| Yano et al. [ | 1.5 mg/kg IV bolus dose at the following intervals prior to suctioning: 1, 3, 5, 10, and 15 min | Single bolus doses | Neither IV of LT lidocaine lowered baseline ICP, but both suppressed ICP elevations with suctioning | Not stated | None described | Both IV and LT lidocaine suppress ICP elevations during suctioning |
N = number of patients, mg = milligram, mcg = microgram, mL = milliliters, wt = weight, kg = kilogram, hr = hour, min = minute, HR = heart rate, MABP = mean arterial blood pressure, ICP = intracranial pressure, CPP = cerebral perfusion pressure, CSF = cerebrospinal fluid, mm Hg = millimeters of mercury, IV = intravenous, LT = laryngotracheal, TBI = traumatic brain injury, LD = lumbar drain, and sec = second. Donegan and Bedford [8] and Donegan et al. [9] are companion publications, with Donegan et al. [9] representing the meeting abstract published prior to the full manuscript [8]. The data from Donegan et al. [9] is not included in the synthesis of data and is only included in the tables for completeness.
Oxford and GRADE level of evidence.
| Reference | Study type | Oxford level of evidence | GRADE level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bedford et al. [ | Prospective nonrandomized | 2b | B |
| Bedford et al. [ | Prospective randomized trial | 2b | B |
| Donegan and Bedford [ | Prospective cohort | 2b | C |
|
| Prospective cohort | 2b | C |
| Grover et al. [ | Prospective randomized trial | 2b | B |
| Hamill et al. [ | Prospective randomized trial | 2b | B |
| Hirayama et al. [ | Prospective nonrandomized | 2b | C |
| Montarry et al. [ | Prospective cohort | 2b | C |
| Samaha et al. [ | Prospective randomized trial | 2b | B |
| White et al. [ | Prospective cohort | 2b | C |
| Yano et al. [ | Prospective cohort | 2b | C |
Donegan and Bedford [8] and Donegan et al. [9] are companion publications, with Donegan et al. [9] representing the meeting abstract published prior to the full manuscript [8]. The data from Donegan et al. [9] is not included in the synthesis of data and is only included in the tables for completeness.