THE USE OF MODERATE THERAPEUTIC HYPOTHERMIA FOR PATIENTS WITH SEVERE HEAD-INJURIES - A PRELIMINARY-REPORT

被引:375
作者
MARION, DW
OBRIST, WD
CARLIER, PM
PENROD, LE
DARBY, JM
机构
[1] UNIV PITTSBURGH, SCH MED, DEPT NEUROL SURG, PITTSBURGH, PA 15261 USA
[2] UNIV PITTSBURGH, SCH MED, DEPT NEUROL SURG, PITTSBURGH, PA 15261 USA
[3] UNIV PITTSBURGH, SCH MED, DEPT ORTHOPAED SURG, DIV PHYS & REHABIL MED, PITTSBURGH, PA 15261 USA
[4] UNIV PITTSBURGH, SCH MED, DEPT ANESTHESIA CRIT CARE, PITTSBURGH, PA 15261 USA
关键词
HYPOTHERMIA; SEVERE HEAD INJURY; CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW; INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE; CEREBRAL METABOLIC RATE FOR OXYGEN;
D O I
10.3171/jns.1993.79.3.0354
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Animal research suggests that moderate therapeutic hypothermia may improve outcome after a severe head injury, but its efficacy has not been established in humans. The authors randomly assigned 40 consecutively treated patients with a severe closed head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score 3 to 7) to either a hypothermia or a normothermia group. Using cooling blankets and cold saline gastric lavage, patients in the hypothermia group were cooled to 32-degrees to 33-degrees-C (brain temperature) within a mean of 10 hours after injury, maintained at that temperature for 24 hours, and rewarmed to 37-degrees to 38-degrees-C over 12 hours. Patients in the normothermia group were maintained at 37-degrees to 38-degrees-C during this time. Deep-brain temperatures were monitored directly and used for all temperature determinations. Intracranial pressure (ICP), cerebral blood flow (CBF), and cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen (CMRO2) were measured serially for all patients. Hypothermia significantly reduced ICP (40%) and CBF (26%) during the cooling period, and neither parameter showed a significant rebound increase after patients were rewarmed. Compared to the normothermia group, the mean CMRO2 in the hypothermia group was lower during cooling and higher 5 days after injury. Three months after injury, 12 of the 20 patients in the hypothermia group had moderate, mild, or no disabilities; eight of the 20 patients in the normothermia group had improved to the same degree. Both groups had a similar incidence of systemic complications, including cardiac arrhythmias, coagulopathies, and pulmonary complications. It is concluded that therapeutic moderate hypothermia is safe and has sustained favorable effects on acute derangements of cerebral physiology and metabolism caused by severe closed head injury. The trend toward better outcome with hypothermia may indicate that its beneficial physiological and metabolic effects limit secondary brain injury.
引用
收藏
页码:354 / 362
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] ENERGY-REQUIRING CELL FUNCTIONS IN THE ISCHEMIC BRAIN - THEIR CRITICAL SUPPLY AND POSSIBLE INHIBITION IN PROTECTIVE THERAPY
    ASTRUP, J
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 1982, 56 (04) : 482 - 497
  • [2] ULTRA-EARLY EVALUATION OF REGIONAL CEREBRAL BLOOD-FLOW IN SEVERELY HEAD-INJURED PATIENTS USING XENON-ENHANCED COMPUTERIZED-TOMOGRAPHY
    BOUMA, GJ
    MUIZELAAR, JP
    STRINGER, WA
    CHOI, SC
    FATOUROS, P
    YOUNG, HF
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 1992, 77 (03) : 360 - 368
  • [3] CEREBRAL-CIRCULATION AND METABOLISM AFTER SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY - THE ELUSIVE ROLE OF ISCHEMIA
    BOUMA, GJ
    MUIZELAAR, JP
    CHOI, SC
    NEWLON, PG
    YOUNG, HF
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 1991, 75 (05) : 685 - 693
  • [4] EFFECT OF MILD HYPOTHERMIA ON ISCHEMIA-INDUCED RELEASE OF NEUROTRANSMITTERS AND FREE FATTY-ACIDS IN RAT-BRAIN
    BUSTO, R
    GLOBUS, MY
    DIETRICH, WD
    MARTINEZ, E
    VALDES, I
    GINSBERG, MD
    [J]. STROKE, 1989, 20 (07) : 904 - 910
  • [5] MILD HYPOTHERMIC INTERVENTION AFTER GRADED ISCHEMIC STRESS IN RATS
    CHOPP, M
    CHEN, H
    DERESKI, MO
    GARCIA, JH
    [J]. STROKE, 1991, 22 (01) : 37 - 43
  • [6] MARKED PROTECTION BY MODERATE HYPOTHERMIA AFTER EXPERIMENTAL TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
    CLIFTON, GL
    JIANG, JY
    LYETH, BG
    JENKINS, LW
    HAMM, RJ
    HAYES, RL
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND METABOLISM, 1991, 11 (01) : 114 - 121
  • [7] DARBY J M, 1992, Anesthesiology (Hagerstown), V77, pA295, DOI 10.1097/00000542-199209001-00295
  • [8] THE ROLE OF EXCITATORY AMINO-ACIDS AND NMDA RECEPTORS IN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
    FADEN, AI
    DEMEDIUK, P
    PANTER, SS
    VINK, R
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1989, 244 (4906) : 798 - 800
  • [9] FAY T, 1945, TRAUMA CENTRAL NERVO, P611
  • [10] GLUTAMATE RECEPTORS ACTIVATE CA-2+ MOBILIZATION AND CA-2+ INFLUX INTO ASTROCYTES
    GLAUM, SR
    HOLZWARTH, JA
    MILLER, RJ
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1990, 87 (09) : 3454 - 3458