| Literature DB >> 33326065 |
Levin Häni1, Mario D Ropelato2, Franca Wagner3, Andreas Nowacki2, Nicole Söll2, Matthias Haenggi4, Andreas Raabe2, Werner J Z'Graggen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/Entities:
Keywords: Brain hypoxia; Cerebral vasospasm; Subarachnoid hemorrhage; Traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33326065 PMCID: PMC8285328 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-020-01171-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.210
Fig. 1Therapeutic algorithm in case of decline of ptO2 measurements. CPP cerebral perfusion pressure; CSF cerebrospinal fluid; MAP mean arterial pressure; PTA percutaneous transluminal angioplasty; SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage; TBI traumatic brain injury
Clinical and radiological details of included patients
| Patient | Condition | Sex | Age (years) | Side | Probe in target | Duration of measurement (days) | Infarcts on last imaging FU§ | Diagnostic studiesπ | Therapeutic measuresω | mRS at 6 months | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Noninvasive | Invasive | ||||||||||
| 1 | SAH | m | 34.88 | R + L | y/y | 12 (R)/10 (L) | Out (R)/in (L) | 2 (R)/1 (L) | 8 (R)/6 (L) | 7 (R)/2 (L) | 4 |
| 2 | SAH | f | 63.02 | L | y | 8 | Out | 0 | 3 | 4 | 1 |
| 3 | SAH | f | 56.09 | R + L | n (R)/y (L) | 12 (R + L) | None/out (L) | 1 (R)/2 (L) | 1 (R)/4 (L) | 2 (R)/4 (L) | 2 |
| 4 | SAH | f | 56.93 | R | y | 2 | Out | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| 5 | TBI | f | 32.44 | R | y | 7 | None | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| 6 | TBI | m | 33.90 | L | y | 1 | None | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| 7 | SAH | f | 66.60 | R + L | y/y | 12 (R)/11 (L) | None (L + R) | 1 (R)/1 (L) | 4 (R)/2 (L) | 1 (R)/0 (L) | 1 |
| 8 | SAH | f | 56.44 | L | y | 6 | None | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| 9 | RCVS | m | 44.50 | R + L | y/y | 6 (L + R) | Out (R + L) | 1 (R)/0 (L) | 1 (R)/1 (L) | 0 | 4 |
| 10 | ICH | f | 23.79 | L | y | 10 | In | 0 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
| 11 | SAH | f | 46.93 | R + L | y/y | 13 (L + R) | None (R + L) | 0 | 0 (R)/2 (L) | 0 (R)/1 (L) | 1 |
§ = presence of ischemic infarcts on the last available imaging follow-up, either inside (in) or outside (out) of the area of the probe placed; π = number of diagnostic studies initiated by declining ptO2 measurements; ω = number of therapeutic measures initiated by declining ptO2 measurements
f Female, FU Follow-up, ICH Intracerebral hemorrhage, L Left side, m Male, mRS Modified Rankin Scale, n No, n/a Not applicable, R Right side, RCVS Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome, SAH Subarachnoid hemorrhage, TBI Traumatic brain injury, y Yes
Comparison of baseline characteristics between study group (CT-guided placement) and control group (conventional placement)
| Study group | Control group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 46.87 (± 14.09) | 57.61 (± 13.90) | 0.077 |
| Female sex | 8 (72.7%) | 9 (60.0%) | 0.683 |
| Bilateral placement | 5 (45.5%) | 11 (73.3%) | 0.228 |
| Disease | 0.628 | ||
| TBI | 2 (18.2%) | 2 (13.3%) | |
| SAH | 7 (63.6%) | 12 (80%) | |
| ICH | 1 (9.1%) | 1 (6.7%) | |
| other | 1 (9.1%) | 0 |
Mean values with standard deviation are given for continuous variables
ICH Intracerebral hemorrhage, SAH Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, TBI Traumatic brain injury
Insertion site and trajectory of ptO2 probes according to vascular territory
| ACA | Watershed | MCA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Midline (cm) | 3.79 (± 0.92) | 3.55 (± 1.73) | 4.05 (± 0.72) | 0.934 |
| Coronal suture (cm) | 1.93 (± 0.60) | 2.24 (± 1.30) | 1.90 (± 1.03) | 0.922 |
| Sagittal (degrees) | 86.70 (± 13.44) | 55.87 (± 22.24) | 42.89 (± 19.39) | 0.107 |
| Coronal (degrees) | 41.70 (± 8.49) | 22.23 (± 21.00) | 28.15 (± 13.37) | 0.392 |
Location of the cranial entry point and trajectory of the ptO2 probes for different vascular territories. Mean± standard deviation is given for all values. The location of the entry points is given as distance from the midline in a coronal plane as well as distance from the coronal suture in the sagittal plane. The trajectories are given in degrees angulation in a sagittal projection with reference to the Frankfurt horizontal plane as well as in a coronal projection with reference to the midline
ACA Anterior cerebral artery territory, Watershed Watershed zone between the anterior and middle cerebral artery territory, MCA Anterior portion of the middle cerebral artery territory, cm Centimeter.* Kruskal–Wallis test
Fig. 2Individual entry points of all successfully placed probes with relation to the midline (horizontal line) and coronal suture (vertical line). All entry points are projected on the same side of the skull for simplification. Entry points of probes in the ACA territory are depicted green, while those of probes in the watershed zone are blue and the anterior MCA territory red. While most entry points cluster 3.5–4 cm lateral to the midline and 2 cm anterior to the coronal suture (to the left in the image), the different groups of vascular territories did not diverge significantly. The larger, black dot marks Kocher’s point as an illustrative reference
Fig. 3Individual trajectories of all successfully placed probes with relation to the axial plane parallel to the Frankfurt horizontal plane (left) and the sagittal plane in the midline (right). All trajectories are projected on the same side of the skull for simplification. Trajectories of probes in the ACA territory are depicted green, while those of probes in the watershed zone are blue and the anterior MCA territory red. As a rule of thumb, the insertion into the anterior MCA territory was angulated aiming at the nasion in the coronal and the inion in the sagittal plane. Contrary, the insertion into the ACA territory was angulated at the contralateral superior temporal line in the coronal plane and the zygomatic protuberance in the sagittal plane. For the watershed zone, an angulation aiming at the nasion in the coronal plane and the tragus in the sagittal plane serves as a rough estimate
Fig. 4Infarction outside the vascular territory of the probe in patient 4. The patient suffered from aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage with subsequent severe vasospasms causing an ischemic infarction. While the probe was inserted into the anterior MCA territory (left, brain CT without contrast), an ischemic infarction developed in the central MCA territory and was visible on initial MR scan (middle, diffusion-weighted imaging) and on follow-up MR imaging (right, T2-weighted image)
Fig. 5The only ischemic lesion inside the vascular territory of the probe occurred in the left frontal lobe of patient 1 (T2-weighted image of brain MR scan). The patient suffered from aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage with subsequent severe vasospasm. The lesion resembles a small demarcated lacunar infarct (arrow). The most likely cause of ischemia in this patient was either vasospasm or an embolic lesion secondary to an angiographic intervention. However, it remains unclear, whether it was related to the introduction of the probe itself or represents a true ischemic lesion