| Literature DB >> 27145814 |
Mauro Oddo1,2, Ilaria Alice Crippa3,4,5, Sangeeta Mehta6, David Menon7, Jean-Francois Payen8, Fabio Silvio Taccone5, Giuseppe Citerio3,4.
Abstract
Daily interruption of sedative therapy and limitation of deep sedation have been shown in several randomized trials to reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation and hospital length of stay, and to improve the outcome of critically ill patients. However, patients with severe acute brain injury (ABI; including subjects with coma after traumatic brain injury, ischaemic/haemorrhagic stroke, cardiac arrest, status epilepticus) were excluded from these studies. Therefore, whether the new paradigm of minimal sedation can be translated to the neuro-ICU (NICU) is unclear. In patients with ABI, sedation has 'general' indications (control of anxiety, pain, discomfort, agitation, facilitation of mechanical ventilation) and 'neuro-specific' indications (reduction of cerebral metabolic demand, improved brain tolerance to ischaemia). Sedation also is an essential therapeutic component of intracranial pressure therapy, targeted temperature management and seizure control. Given the lack of large trials which have evaluated clinically relevant endpoints, sedative selection depends on the effect of each agent on cerebral and systemic haemodynamics. Titration and withdrawal of sedation in the NICU setting has to be balanced between the risk that interrupting sedation might exacerbate brain injury (e.g. intracranial pressure elevation) and the potential benefits of enhanced neurological function and reduced complications. In this review, we provide a concise summary of cerebral physiologic effects of sedatives and analgesics, the advantages/disadvantages of each agent, the comparative effects of standard sedatives (propofol and midazolam) and the emerging role of alternative drugs (ketamine). We suggest a pragmatic approach for the use of sedation-analgesia in the NICU, focusing on some practical aspects, including optimal titration and management of sedation withdrawal according to ABI severity.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27145814 PMCID: PMC4857238 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1294-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Mechanism of action, cerebral physiologic effects and main advantages/disadvantages of sedatives/analgesics in patients with acute brain injury
| Mechanism of action | CNS effects | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Propofol | GABA-R agonist | ↓ ICP | Rapid onset and short duration of action | No amnesia, especially at low doses |
| ↓ CMRO2, ↓ CBF, preserved CO2 reactivity and cerebral autoregulation | Clearance independent of renal or hepatic function | No analgesic effect | ||
| ↓ Cerebral electrical activity, can be used to induce EEG burst suppression (at high dose) | No significant drug interactions | Tolerance and tachyphylaxis | ||
| ↓ MAP, ↓ CPP (particularly in hypovolemic patients) | ||||
| ↑ Triglycerides, ↑ caloric intake | ||||
| Propofol infusion syndrome (↓ HR, ↓ pH, ↑ lactate, ↑ CPK, myocardial failure) | ||||
| Midazolam | GABA-R agonist | ↓ CMRO2, ↓ CBF | Amnesia | Tolerance and tachyphylaxis |
| Slight ↓ ICP | Rapid onset of effect in acutely agitated patient | Hepatic metabolism to active metabolite | ||
| Preserved CO2 reactivity and cerebral autoregulation | Less haemodynamic instability than propofol (may prevent CPP reductions) | May accumulate in renal dysfunction | ||
| Anti-epileptic effect | May prolong the duration of MV | |||
| May increase ICU delirium | ||||
| Barbiturates | GABA-R agonist | ↓↓ CBF that is proportional to the ↓↓ CMRO2 (up to 60 %) during burst suppression | By ↓↓ CBF and CBV, barbiturates have a strong effect on ↓↓ ICP | Hypotension, ↓↓ MAP/CPP |
| ↓↓ ICP | Indications for barbiturates are limited to the treatment of refractory ICP and refractory status epilepticus, titrated to the lowest effective dose; EEG may help with the titration of barbiturate therapy | Immune suppression, increased risk of infections (pneumonia) | ||
| Adrenal dysfunction | ||||
| Morphine | μ-receptor agonist | ↑ ICP and ↓ MAP/CPP transiently following bolus | Low cost | Low predictability to control ICP |
| Histamine release | ||||
| Accumulation with hepatic/renal impairment | ||||
| Fentanyl, sufentanil | μ-receptor agonists | ↑ ICP and ↓ MAP/CPP transiently following bolus | More potent opioid than morphine (sufentanil is 1000× more potent than morphine) | Accumulation with hepatic impairment |
| Control ICP during endotracheal suctioning | May prolong the duration of MV | |||
| Remifentanil | μ-receptor agonist | No changes in ICP or CBF during drug infusion | 500× more potent than morphine | Hyperalgesia at the cessation of drug infusion |
| Rapid onset and short duration of action to permit neurological assessment | Limited effect to control ICP during painful procedures | |||
| Clearance independent of renal or hepatic function | Tachyphylaxis | |||
| Higher cost than other opiates | ||||
| Dexmedetomidine | α2-agonist | ICP ↓ or unchanged | Sedative, analgesic and anxiolytic | Very limited clinical experience in patients with ABI |
| CPP ↑ or unchanged | Short acting, no accumulation, patient may be frequently assessed neurologically | In non-neurointensive care population: | ||
| SjvO2 unchanged | Minimal respiratory depression | ● hypotension, bradycardia | ||
| PbtO2 unchanged | May reduce incidence/severity of delirium | ● arrhythmias including atrial fibrillation | ||
| ● hyperglycaemia | ||||
| May require high doses; deep sedation may not be possible | ||||
| High cost | ||||
| Ketamine | NMDA-R antagonist | ICP ↓ or unchanged | Short acting, fast onset | Hallucinations/emergence phenomena |
| CPP ↑ or unchanged | Induces sedation, analgesia and anaesthesia | |||
| No change in SjvO2 or cerebral blood flow velocities | Does not depress respiration | |||
| Haemodynamic stability, preserves MAP | ||||
| May be used as an adjunct for refractory seizures | ||||
| No withdrawal symptoms | ||||
| Inhaled anaesthetics | Not fully established: may act at several sites (reduction in junctional conductance; activation of Ca2+-dependent ATP-ase; binding to the GABA-R, the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel, and the glutamate receptor) | ↓ Cerebral electrical activity, ↓ CMRO2 | ↑ CBF in patients with cerebral ischaemia (0.8 % isoflurane) | ↑ ICP due to ↑ CBV |
| Dose-dependent effects on CBF: ↓ CBF at low concentrations, ↑ CBF at high concentrations | Rapid elimination | Myocardial depression | ||
| Malignant hyperthermia | ||||
| Not widely available, requires specific systems and expertise | ||||
| Data very preliminary |
ABI acute brain injury, ATP adenosine triphosphate, CBF cerebral blood flow, CBV cerebral blood volume, CMRO cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption, CNS central nervous system, CO carbon dioxide, CPK creatine phosphokinase, CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, EEG electroencephalography, GABA-R γ-aminobutyric acid receptor, HR heart rate, ICP intracranial pressure, MAP mean arterial pressure, MV mechanical ventilation, NMDA-R N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor, PbtO brain tissue oxygen pressure, SjvO jugular venous bulb saturation
Suggested options for sedation–analgesia after acute brain injury, according to clinical scenario and organ function
| Indication | First-line sedative | First-line analgesic | Alternatives |
|---|---|---|---|
| ‘Standard’ sedation, no ICP elevation | Propofol | Fentanyl | Sufentanil |
| Midazolam | Morphine | Remifentanil | |
| Elevated ICP | Propofol | Fentanyl | Sufentanil |
| Midazolam | Morphine | Remifentanil | |
| Targeted temperature management | Propofol | Fentanyl | Sufentanil |
| Midazolam | Morphine | Remifentanil | |
| Status epilepticus | Propofol | Fentanyl | Sufentanil |
| Midazolam | Morphine | Remifentanil | |
| Liver dysfunction | Propofol | Fentanyl | – |
| Sufentanil | |||
| Remifentanil | |||
| Renal dysfunction | Propofol | Remifentanil | – |
| Haemodynamic instability | Midazolam | Fentanyl | Ketamine |
| Agitation, delirium | α2-agonists | Fentanyl | Antipsychotics |
| Morphine |
ICP intracranial pressure
Fig. 1Suggested approach to the management of sedation–analgesia in neurointensive care patients. Note: clinical and neuro-radiological follow-up and indications to intracranial monitoring must be evaluated in all patients. High intracranial pressure (ICP) defined as >20 mmHg