| Literature DB >> 27165897 |
Christopher J Rhee1, Charles D Fraser2, Kathleen Kibler3, Ronald B Easley3, Dean B Andropoulos3, Marek Czosnyka4, Georgios V Varsos5, Peter Smielewski4, Craig G Rusin6, Ken M Brady3, Jeffrey R Kaiser7.
Abstract
Our objective was to quantify cerebrovascular autoregulation as a function of gestational age (GA) and across the phases of the cardiac cycle. One hundred eighty-six premature infants, with a GA range of 23-33 weeks, were monitored using umbilical artery catheters and transcranial Doppler insonation of middle cerebral artery flow velocity (FV) for 1-h sessions over the first week of life. Autoregulation was quantified as a moving correlation coefficient between systolic arterial blood pressure (ABP) and systolic FV (Sx); mean ABP and mean FV (Mx); diastolic ABP and diastolic FV (Dx). Autoregulation was compared across GAs for each aspect of the cardiac cycle. Systolic FV was pressure-passive in infants with the lowest GA, and Sx decreased with increased GA (r = -0.3; p < 0.001). By contrast, Dx was elevated in all subjects, and showed minimal change with increased GA (r = -0.06; p = 0.05). Multivariate analysis confirmed that GA (p < 0.001) and the "closing margin" (p < 0.01) were associated with Sx. Premature infants have low and almost always pressure-passive diastolic cerebral blood FV. Conversely, the regulation of systolic cerebral blood FV by autoregulation was manifested in this cohort at a GA of between 23 and 33 weeks.Entities:
Keywords: Arterial blood pressure; Cerebrovascular pressure autoregulation; Closing margin; Prematurity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27165897 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-22533-3_31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurochir Suppl ISSN: 0065-1419