| Literature DB >> 31418143 |
Angelika Ehlert1, Jitka Starekova2, Gerd Manthei3, Annette Ehlert-Gamm4, Joachim Flack5, Marie Gessert6, Joachim Gerss7, Volker Hesselmann8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) require close treatment in neuro intensive care units (NICUs). The treatments available to counteract secondary deterioration and delayed ischemic events remain restricted; moreover, available neuro-monitoring of comatose patients is undependable. In comatose patients, clinical signs are hidden, and timing interventions to prevent the evolution of a perfusion disorder in response to fixed ischemic brain damage remain a challenge for NICU teams. Consequently, comatose patients often suffer secondary brain infarctions. The outcomes for long-term intubated patients w/wo pupil dilatation are the worst, with only 10% surviving. We previously added two nitroxide (NO) donors to the standard treatment: continuous intravenous administration of Molsidomine in patients with mild-to-moderate aSAH and, if required as a supplement, intraventricular boluses of sodium nitroprusside (SNP) in high-risk patients to overcome the so-called NO-sink effect, which leads to vasospasm and perfusion disorders. NO boluses were guided by clinical status and promptly reversed recurrent episodes of delayed ischemic neurological deficit. In this study, we tried to translate this concept, the initiation of intraventricular NO application on top of continuous Molsidomine infusion, from awake to comatose patients who lack neurological-clinical monitoring but are primarily monitored using frequently applied transcranial Doppler (TCD).Entities:
Keywords: Coma; DCI; Intraventricular/intravenous nitric oxide donor; Molsidomine; Poor-grade aneurysmal SAH; Sodium nitroprusside; Transcranial Doppler sonography; Vasospasm
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31418143 PMCID: PMC7272492 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-019-00809-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.210
Patient characteristics, treatments and complications
| Patients | Hunt and Hess IV/modified Fisher IV, no pupil dilatation | Hunt and Hess V/modified fisher IV, dilated pupils |
|---|---|---|
| Total = 18 | 12a (1 nonresponder) | 6a |
| Mean age | 59.6 (range 38–83) | 58.5 (range 41–80) |
| Gender | 7 Females, 5 males | 3 Females, 3 males |
| Aneurysm location | MCA | BA |
| Treatment | Coil | Coil |
| Medical history | ||
| Missing segments in the circle of Willis—perfusion by a dominant vessel | 1 | 1 |
| Ventriculostomy | 12 | 6 |
| Intubated and sedated | 12b | 6 |
| Re-bleeding | 0 | 2 |
| Ultra-early vasospasm | 4b | 3 |
| Initial reanimation, intra- cerebral hemorrhage ( | 5 | 6 |
| Coiling or clipping associated infarctions | 3 | 2 |
| Severe complications: sinus thrombosis, type II heparin-induced thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, sepsis, acute renal failure, aspiration pneumonia, diabetes insipidus, brain edema (with craniectomy, | 8 | 7 |
| Intraventricular hemorrhage | 2 | 4 |
ACA anterior cerebral artery, ACoA anterior communicanting artery, BA basilar artery, ICA internal cerebral artery, MCA middle cerebral artery, PICA posterior inferior cerebellar artery
aNot due to hydrocephalus
bIncluding a nonresponder
Fig. 2Transcranial Doppler ultrasound before and after sodium nitroprusside bolus. This figure depicts examples of transcranial Doppler sonography changes prompting an intraventricular administration of SNP bolus and its results. Upper panel: 48yo male, day 3 after subarachnoid hemorrhage, Glasgow Coma Scale-3, Hunt and Hess V, intracranial pressure 8 mmHg, mean arterial pressure 76 mmHg, Molsidomine 6 mg/h, no vasopressors. Left panel, 9:44 am: the right anterior cerebral artery prior to sodium nitroprusside; mean flow 318 cm/s. Right panel, 10:24 am: after 2 × 5 mg sodium nitroprusside, mean flow 197 cm/s, the clear shape of the signal. After the second bolus of sodium nitroprusside, 170 mg Urapidil. Lower panel: 56yo male, day 6 after subarachnoid hemorrhage, Glasgow Coma Scale-5, Hunt and Hess IV, intracranial pressure 17 mmHg, mean arterial pressure 97 mmHg, Molsidomine 16 mg/h, no vasopressors. Left panel, 5:43 pm: the basilar artery prior to sodium nitroprusside, mean flow 221 cm/s. Right panel, 6:36 pm: after 5 mg sodium nitroprusside, mean flow 69 cm/s. After sodium nitroprusside, 180 mg Urapidil
Fig. 1Response-guided evolution of decision tree for SNP administration
Changes in transcranial Doppler ultrasonography recordings in response to sodium nitroprusside intraventricular bolus
| TCD findings: vasospasm and its resolution | MCA left | MCA right | ACA left | ACA right | VA/BA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prior SNP: measurable values (no stump) | |||||
| Post-SNP: flow reduction mean (SD; range), | − 40.4% (19.2%; 5–80%) | − 36% (17.0%; 5–90%) | − 40% (19.5%; 4–75%) | − 35% (15.7%; 5–66%) | − 48% (18.3%; 8–73%) |
| Post-first SNP: unchanged flow | |||||
| Prior SNP: stump or filiform signals | |||||
| Post-SNP: return to normalized signals |
ACA anterior cerebral artery, BA basilar artery, MCA middle cerebral artery, SNP sodium nitro prusside, SD standard deviation, TCD transcranial doppler sonography, VA vertebral artery
Fig. 3Sodium nitroprusside effect on cerebral perfusion and vasospasm in a patient after severe subarachnoid hemorrhage. Upper panel—CT perfusion a regional mean transit time and b cerebral blood flow during treatment interruption revealed high-grade perfusion disorder and brain at risk in the anterior cerebral artery territory (arrows). A brain infarction in the left anterior cerebral artery territory existed since clipping. c CT angiogram during molsidomine interruption confirmed transcranial Doppler sonography findings of the high-grade vasospasm in the anterior and the middle cerebral arteries. Arrows indicate vasospasm in both arteries. Lower panel—e–h Digital subtraction angiography after restarting molsidomine (1.5 h later; transcranial Doppler sonography was normal showing the anterior cerebral artery segment with no remaining perfusion gap and well filled the internal carotid and the middle cerebral artery. Left-sided aneurysm clipping induced truncation of the A2 segment of the anterior cerebral artery without perfusion disorder in the remaining territories. Arrows point at the full reversal of the high-grade spasm of the internal carotid artery at the bifurcation to the middle cerebral artery bilaterally and the anterior cerebral artery (right)
Changes in imaging before and after sodium nitroprusside
| Patient | TCD cm/s mean | CTA/CTP prior to SNP | Antihypertensive after SNP | SNP dose | DSA post-SNP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MCA L 290, ACA L stump | Mean transit time + time to peak prolonged in left MCA/ACA prolonged, no infarction | 150 mg Urapidil | 3 × 7 mg | Punctual stenosis in the left MCA (80%) and ACA 85%, ICA 60%, no remaining perfusion disturbance |
| 2 | MCA L 290, MCA R filiform, bilateral stump in the ACA | Massive prolongation of mean transit time + time to peak bifrontal, massive vasospasm with narrowing the MCA and the ACA about 95% | 100 mg Propofol 300 mg Urapidil | 3 × 6 + 8 + 10 mg and high-dose Molsidomine | MCA 30% narrowing, ACA R punctual 90%, ACA L 50% narrowing no new perfusion arrest |
| 3 | NA | Both MCA narrowing 70%, mean transit time + time to peak prolonged, CBF reduced in left MCA/ACA territories, no infarction | 40 mg Urapidil 250 mg Propofol | 2 × 5 mg + 7 mg SNP | No constriction > 50%, no perfusion disorder |
These examples illustrate the relationship between transcranial Doppler ultrasonography and CT diagnostics (CT perfusion and CT angiography) before sodium nitroprusside application, the amount of antihypertensives required after sodium nitroprusside application to control evoked systemic hypertension and the subsequent alleviation of vasospasm on digital subtraction arteriography
2: After unintended Molsidomine interruption
ACA anterior cerebral artery, CTA CT angiography, CTP CT perfusion, DSA digital substraction angiography, MCA middle cerebral artery, NA not applicable, SNP sodium nitro prusside, TCD transcranial doppler sonography