| Literature DB >> 32232106 |
Raj K Narayan1, Chunyan Li1,2,3, Keren Powell1, Kevin Shah2, Caleb Hao1, Yi-Chen Wu1, Aashish John1.
Abstract
Hemorrhagic shock (HS), a major cause of early death from trauma, accounts for around 40% of mortality, with 33-56% of these deaths occurring before the patient reaches a medical facility. Intravenous fluid therapy and blood transfusions are the cornerstone of treating HS. However, these options may not be available soon after the injury, resulting in death or a poorer quality of survival. Therefore, new strategies are needed to manage HS patients before they can receive definitive care. Recently, various forms of neuromodulation have been investigated as possible supplementary treatments for HS in the prehospital phase of care. Here, we provide an overview of neuromodulation methods that show promise to treat HS, such as vagus nerve stimulation, electroacupuncture, trigeminal nerve stimulation, and phrenic nerve stimulation and outline their possible mechanisms in the treatment of HS. Although all of these approaches are only validated in the preclinical models of HS and are yet to be translated to clinical settings, they clearly represent a paradigm shift in the way that this deadly condition is managed in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Autonomic nervous system; Electroacupuncture; Hemorrhagic shock; Inflammation; Neuromodulation; Phrenic nerve stimulation; Resuscitation; Trigeminal nerve stimulation; Vagus nerve stimulation
Year: 2019 PMID: 32232106 PMCID: PMC7098257 DOI: 10.1186/s42234-019-0033-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioelectron Med ISSN: 2332-8886
Novel Neuromodulation Methods of Hemorrhagic Shock
| Neuromodulation | Intervention | Animal Species | Observed Effect | Author/Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) | VNS preceding T/HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Prevention of T/HS-induced gut injury Prevents formation of toxic lymph | Levy et al. |
| VNS preceding HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Decreased gut and lung permeability Decreased pulmonary neutrophil sequestration | Levy et al. | |
| VNS preceding T/HS | Male Balb/c Mice | Prevention of T/HS-induced changes in gut barrier integrity Decrease in T/HS-induced lung injury Decreased binding of NF-kB | Reys et al. | |
| VNS following T/HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Reduction in histologic gut injury Reduction in ML flow | Morishita et al. | |
| VNS following T/HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Prevention of changes in ML exosome protein payload Limitation of systemic inflammatory response | Williams et al. | |
| VNS following HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Attenuation of peak serum TNF-alpha amounts Inhibition of liver NF-KappaB expression Prevented the development of hypotension | Li et al. | |
| VNS following HS | Male Wistar Rats | Increase in survival time Reversion of hypotension Modulation of inflammatory response | Guarini et al. | |
| VNS during resuscitation | Male Wistar Rats | Decreased inflammatory response to HS Improved coagulation | Rezende-Neto et al. | |
| Electroacupuncture (EA) | EA at ST36 + Delayed Fluid Replacement | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Inhibition of plasma adrenal gland concentration increase Enhances the therapeutic effect of DFR | Wang et al. |
| EA at ST36 + Delayed Fluid Replacement | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Improves blood pressure Raises early survival rate of HS rats Maintains intestinal barrier function Improves the degree of intestinal ischemia | Shi et al. | |
| EA at ST36 following HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Attenuation of systemic inflammatory response Intestinal barrier protection Organ function improvement Survival rate improvement | Du et al. | |
| EA at ST36 + Delayed Fluid Replacement | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Protective effects upon hepatic ischemic injury following HS | Zhong et al. | |
| EA at ST36 following HS | Male Mongrel Dogs | Improvement of hemodynamics Attenuation of cytokine and lactate blood concentration in HS. | Suo et al. | |
| Trigeminal Nerve Stimulation (TNS) | Percutaneous TNS following HS | Male Sprague-Dawley Rats | Modulation of both SNS and PNS Pressor response Improved cerebral perfusion Decreased inflammation | Li et al. |
| Phrenic Nerve Stimulation (PhNS) | PhNS in combination with ITV | Female Swine | Improvement in cardiac preload and key hemodynamic variables | Samniah et al. |