| Literature DB >> 34302517 |
Giuseppe Citerio1,2, Chiara Robba3,4, Stefania Galimberti5,6, David K Menon7, Paola Rebora5,6, Matteo Petrosino6, Eleonora Rossi8, Letterio Malgeri9, Nino Stocchetti10,11.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe the management of arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PaCO2) in severe traumatic brain-injured (TBI) patients, and the optimal target of PaCO2 in patients with high intracranial pressure (ICP).Entities:
Keywords: Carbon dioxide; Hyperventilation; Intracranial pressure; Outcome; Traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34302517 PMCID: PMC8308080 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-021-06470-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1(a) Distributions of the daily lowest PaCO2 recorded in the first 7 days of ICU in each participating centre (coloured by country) and overall (grey area). These distributions were estimated by a Gaussian kernel density. (b) Centre-specific mean values (coloured by country) of daily lowest PaCO2 with the corresponding 95% confidence intervals. The solid vertical line represents the overall mean of daily lowest PaCO2 values, and the size of the dots is proportional to the number of patients in the centre. PaCO the partial pressure of carbon dioxide, AT Austria, BE Belgium, DE Germany, ES Spain, FI Finland, FR France, HU Hungary, IT Italy, LT Lithuania, NL Netherlands, NO Norway, SE Serbia, UK United Kingdom
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics, including trauma characteristics, clinical presentation, and neuroimaging features at ICU admission in the overall population and stratified according to the presence or not of ICP monitoring
| Characteristic | Overall ( | no-ICPm ( | ICPm ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years), median (Q1–Q3) | 48 (29–64) | 53 (31–69) | 46 (28–61) | < 0.001 | |
| Sex, | Female | 284 (25.8) | 89 (25.5) | 195 (26) | 0.929 |
| Thoracic trauma, | Yes | 138 (12.5) | 42(12) | 96 (12.8) | 0.802 |
| ISS, median (Q1–Q3) | 34 (25–48) | 34 (25–43) | 34 (25–48) | 0.011 | |
| Hypotension, | Yes | 178 (17.4) | 60 (17.7) | 118 (17.3) | 0.936 |
| Not available | 78 | 10 | 68 | ||
| Hypoxia, | Yes | 182 (17.9) | 53 (15.6) | 129 (19) | 0.217 |
| Not available | 82 | 10 | 72 | ||
| Severity TBI, | GCS ≤ 8 | 367 (35.3) | 147 (44.3) | 220 (31) | < 0.001 |
| GCS > 8 | 674 (64.7) | 185 (55.7) | 489 (69) | ||
| Not available | 59 | 17 | 42 | ||
| Pupillary reactivity, | Both reactive | 799 (75.8) | 280 (82.8) | 519 (72.5) | 0.001 |
| One reactive | 89 (8.4) | 22 (6.5) | 67 (9.4) | ||
| Both unreactive | 166 (15.7) | 36 (10.7) | 130 (18.2) | ||
| Not available | 47 | 11 | 35 | ||
| GCS motor, | None | 460 (42.7) | 129 (37.7) | 331 (45) | < 0.001 |
| Extension | 51 (4.7) | 9 (2.6) | 42 (5.7) | ||
| Abnormal flexion | 60 (5.6) | 10 (2.9) | 50 (6.8) | ||
| Normal flexion | 89 (8.3) | 30 (8.8) | 59 (8) | ||
| Localizes/obeys | 418 (38.8) | 164 (48) | 254 (34.5) | ||
| Not available | 22 | 7 | 15 | ||
| Marshall CT classification, | 1 | 63 (6.5) | 48 (15.6) | 15 (2.3) | 0.0005 |
| 2 | 416 (42.9) | 167 (54.2) | 249 (37.7) | ||
| 3 | 98 (10.1) | 17 (5.5) | 81 (12.3) | ||
| 4 | 19 (2) | 3 (1) | 16 (2.4) | ||
| 5 | 6 (0.6) | 2 (0.6) | 4 (0.6) | ||
| 6 | 367 (37.9) | 71 (23.1) | 296 (44.8) | ||
| Not available | 131 | 41 | 90 | ||
| Overall PaCO2 (mmHg), mean (SD) | 39.10 (6) | 39.93 (6.8) | 38.72 (5.6) | 0.002 | |
| Lowest PaCO2 (mmHg), mean (SD) | 34.66 (5.98) | 35.92 (6.67) | 34.09 (5.56) | < 0.001 | |
| Highest PaCO2 (mmHg), mean (SD) | 43.68 (8.1) | 44.07 (8.6) | 43,5 (7.86) | 0.287 |
Hypotension was defined as a documented systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg; hypoxia was defined as a documented partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2) < 8 kPa (60 mmHg), oxygen saturation (SaO2) < 90%, or both; PaCO2 data refer to values at ICU admission
PaCO the partial pressure of carbon dioxide, SD standard deviation, Q1–Q3 I and III quartiles, ISS injury severity score, TBI traumatic brain injury, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, ICP intracranial pressure monitored, ICU intensive care unit
Fig. 2(a): Scatterplot of the mean daily lowest PaCO2 values in no-ICPm vs ICPm patients in each participating centre (coloured by country). The dashed line represents the line of identity, and a data point on or close to the line indicates that PaCO2 targets in that centre were not affected by the presence of ICP monitoring. The gradient of grey zones on either side of the grey area indicates increasing deviations from this line of identity between values in no-ICPm vs ICPm patients. Each gradation in shade representing one unit change (mmHg). The size of the dots is proportional to the number of ICPm patients at a centre. The outlier centre from Hungary included only two no-ICPm patients, out of a total of 12 patients, with only two measurements each before ending ventilation. (b) Mean of the daily lowest PaCO2 values in ICPm patients with no episodes of elevated ICP (ICP ≤ 20 mmHg) vs ICPm patients with at least one episode of elevated ICP (> 20 mmHg) in each participating centre (coloured by country). The dashed line represents the line of identity, and the size of the dot is proportional to the number of ICPm patients with elevated ICP. PaCO the partial pressure of carbon dioxide, AT Austria, BE Belgium, DE Germany, ES Spain, FI Finland, FR France, HU Hungary, IT Italy, LT Lithuania, NL Netherlands, NO Norway, SE Serbia, UK United Kingdom
Fig. 3Caterpillar plot of between-centre variation in using profound HV. The figure shows the predicted random intercepts for each centre, on the log-odds scale, along with their 95% prediction intervals. Higher values indicate a higher propensity to use profound HV. A longitudinal random effect logistic model was used to correct for random variation and adjusted for the core IMPACT covariates and elevated ICP. The MOR summarises the between-centre variation: a MOR = 1 indicates no variation, while the larger the MOR is, the larger the variation present. The median odds ratio (MOR = 2.04) refers to the odds of using profound HV between two randomly selected centres for patients with the same covariates and (comparable) random effects
Results of the logistic mixed-effect model on 6-month outcomes by the instrumental variable approach with complete data (n = 919)
| Outcome | 6-month GOSE | 6-month mortality |
|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
| Centre HV tendency (per 10% change)* | 1.12 (0.9–1.38) 0.3138 | 1.06 (0.77–1.45) 0.7166 |
| Age | 1.04 (1.03–1.05) < 0.0001 | 1.05 (1.04–1.06) < 0.0001 |
| None | 2.08 (1.46–2.95) < 0.0001 | 2.28 (1.44–3.62) 0.0004 |
| Extension | 5.47 (2.39–12.51) < 0.0001 | 1.82 (0.74–4.48) 0.1886 |
| Abnormal flexion | 3.29 (1.63–6.65) 0.0009 | 1.69 (0.65–4.37) 0.2794 |
| Normal flexion | 1.45 (0.82–2.56) 0.1980 | 1.2 (0.55–2.64) 0.6421 |
| Localizes/obeys | 1 | 1 |
| Both reacting | 1 | 1 |
| One reacting | 1.98 (1.14–3.43) 0.0146 | 2.18 (1.16–4.11) 0.0154 |
| Both unreacting | 3.29 (2.05–5.27) < 0.0001 | 6.04 (3.69–9.87) < 0.0001 |
| No | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 1.79 (1.27–2.51) 0.0008 | 1.00 (0.65–1.54) 0.9948 |
| AUC ICP > 20 (per one SD change)° | 3.72 (1.94–7.15) < 0.0001 | 5.15 (2.86–9.25) < 0.0001 |
OR Odds ratio, CI confidence intervals, SD standard deviation
*Centre HV propensity is calculated as the percentage of daily lowest PaCO2 < 30 mmHg out of all available measures
°Standardized AUC ICP > 20 is the dose of intracranial hypertension calculated as the area under the ICP profile above 20 mmHg
| The manipulation of arterial carbon dioxide levels (PaCO2) is easy, and hyperventilation (HV) has been a common ICP-lowering strategy for over half a century. However, hyperventilation-induced vasoconstriction is a double-edged sword. It reduces cerebral blood volume and intracranial volume, and therefore, lowers ICP |
| We observed huge variability among centers in PaCO2 values and use of HV. Although causal inferences cannot be drawn from these observational data, our results suggest that, in patients with severe intracranial hypertension, HV is not associated with worse long-term clinical outcome |