| Literature DB >> 28861407 |
Bistra Iordanova1, Lingjue Li2, Robert S B Clark3,4, Mioara D Manole3.
Abstract
Greater than 50% of patients successfully resuscitated from cardiac arrest have evidence of neurological disability. Numerous studies in children and adults, as well as in animal models have demonstrated that cerebral blood flow (CBF) is impaired after cardiac arrest. Stages of cerebral perfusion post-resuscitation include early hyperemia, followed by hypoperfusion, and finally either resolution of normal blood flow or protracted hyperemia. At the level of the microcirculation the blood flow is heterogeneous, with areas of no flow, low flow, and increased flow. CBF directed therapies in animal models of cardiac arrest improved neurological outcome, and therefore, the alterations in CBF after cardiac arrest likely contribute to the development of hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy. Current intensive care after cardiac arrest is centered upon maintaining systemic oxygenation, normal blood pressure values for age, maintaining general homeostasis, and avoiding hyperthermia. Assessment of CBF and oxygenation is not routinely performed after cardiac arrest. Currently available and underutilized techniques to assess cerebral perfusion include transcranial doppler, near-infrared spectroscopy, and arterial spin labeling magnetic resonance imaging. Limited clinical studies established the role of CBF and oxygenation monitoring in prognostication after cardiac arrest and few studies suggest that guiding critical care post-resuscitation to mean arterial pressures above the minimal autoregulatory range might improve outcome. Important knowledge gaps thus remain in cerebral monitoring and CBF and oxygen goal-directed therapies post-resuscitation from cardiac arrest.Entities:
Keywords: arterial spin labeling; cardiac arrest; cerebral blood flow; cerebral perfusion; hyperemia; hypoperfusion; post-cardiac arrest syndrome; transcrianial Doppler
Year: 2017 PMID: 28861407 PMCID: PMC5561008 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Current methods for assessment of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in animals and humans.
| Method | Animals vs. humans | Invasive vs. non-invasive | Area measured | Serial vs. one time point | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laser Doppler | Animals | Invasive | Regional/small area | Serial | Measures perfusion in a localized area around the probe |
| Microspheres | Animals | Invasive | Regional | One time point | Requires sacrifice of the animal for analysis of blood flow |
| 14C autoradiography | Animals | Invasive | Regional | One time point | Requires sacrifice of the animal for analysis of blood flow |
| Laser Speckle Flow | Animals | Invasive | Regional | Serial | Assesses cortical areas only. Requires deflection of the scalp and craniotomy in adult animals |
| Animals | Invasive | Regional/small area | Serial | Assesses perfusion in several areas of 50–100 µm over a 2 mm cortical window | |
| Xenon CT | Animals | Non-invasive | Regional | Serial | Used for humans exclusively in research |
| Arterial spin labeling magnetic resonance imaging, PET, SPECT | Animals and humans | Non-invasive | Regional | Serial | Current gold standard for CBF measurements |
| Transcranial Doppler ultrasound | Animals and humans | Non-invasive | Regional/small area | Serial | Measures velocity at the level of middle cerebral artery. Indirect assessment of cerebral microvasculature |
| Near-infrared spectroscopy | Animals and humans | Non-invasive | Regional/small area | Serial | Measures tissue oxygenation in a localized area under the sensor |
| Thermal Diffusion flowmetry | Animals and humans | Invasive | Regional/small area | Serial | Utilized in humans after traumatic brain injury |
Figure 1Regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) after pediatric asphyxial cardiac arrest after moderate (A) and prolonged (B) insults. Figure is a graphic representation of a compilation of two studies from our laboratory (10, 55).
Summary of studies assessing cerebral blood flow (CBF) post-resuscitation.
| Reference | Method | Age | Time point | Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iida et al. ( | Transcranial Doppler (TCD) | Adults | 0–12 h | Low mean flow velocity, high pulsatility index (PI). Suggestive of microangiopathy, vasoconstriction, and no reflow |
| Lemiale et al. ( | TCD | Adults | 12–24 h | Low mean flow velocity, high PI. Suggestive of microangiopathy, vasoconstriction, and no reflow |
| Doepp Connolly et al. ( | TCD | Adults | 0–48 h, 3–5 days, 7–10 days post-resuscitation | No correlation of TCD and outcome |
| Lin et al. ( | TCD | Children | Before, during, and after hypothermia | Undetectable flow was associated with death. Markers for good prognosis: normal flow velocity during rewarming and normal PI during rewarming or hypothermia |
| Manchester et al. ( | Arterial spin labeling magnetic resonance imaging (ASL-MRI) | Children | >24 h post-resuscitation | No CBF difference between patients with favorable and unfavorable outcomes. MRI was performed at 6 ± 4 days after cardiac arrest |
| Pollock et al. ( | ASL-MRI | Adults and children | 1–13 days post-resuscitation | Global hyperperfusion pattern identified. Most patients had poor prognosis |
| Beckstead et al. ( | 133Xenon Washout | Adults | 2–6 and >6 h post-resuscitation | Decreased CBF and decreased oxygen metabolism at 2–6 h, followed by increased CBF with relative hyperemia at >6 h |
| Cohan et al. ( | Xenon inhalation | Adults | 18–36 h post-resuscitation | Increased CBF was associated with coma, isoelectric encephalogram, and death. Normal CBF was associated with regaining consciousness |
| Brodersen ( | Xenon inhalation | Adults | 1–12 days post-resuscitation | Most patients had relative hyperemia. CBF was variable and paralleled the oxygen metabolism |
| Sundgreen et al. ( | TCD | Adults | 0–24 h post-resuscitation | Cerebral autoregulation was either absent or right-shifted |
| Nishizawa and Kudoh ( | CBF index | Adults | 3 days post-resuscitation | All patients were comatose. Impaired cerebral autoregulation was detected |