PERITONEAL COOLING FOR MILD CEREBRAL HYPOTHERMIA AFTER CARDIAC-ARREST IN DOGS

被引:34
作者
XIAO, F [1 ]
SAFAR, P [1 ]
ALEXANDER, H [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV PITTSBURGH,MED CTR,SAFAR CTR RESUSCITAT RES,PITTSBURGH,PA 15260
关键词
HYPOTHERMIA; PERITONEAL LAVAGE; RESUSCITATION;
D O I
10.1016/0300-9572(94)00858-D
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
After normothermic cardiac arrest in dogs, we found that mild hypothermia (34 degrees C) of 1-2 h reduced brain damage, providing that hypothermia was achieved within 15 min of reperfusion. A clinically feasible rapid brain-cooling method is needed, As head-neck surface cooling alone in dogs was found to be too slow (0.1 degrees C/min), we reviewed peritoneal cooling in the Introduction and Discussion sections. Preliminary experiments without cardiac arrest: In 5 dogs with spontaneous circulation and IPPV, 21 of Ringer's solution at 10 degrees C were instilled into the peritoneal cavity, left for 5 min, and drained. Brain (tympanic membrane) temperature (Tty) decreased by a mean of 0.3 degrees C/min (12 min to 34 degrees C). Core (pulmonary artery) temperature (Tpa) decreased by a mean of 0.8 degrees C/min (5 min to 34 degrees C). Cooling after cardiac arrest: In our reproducible dog model of normothermic ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest of 11 min (no flow), brief low-flow normothermic cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) was used for reperfusion and restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) within 2 min. In 24 dogs, mild hypothermia was induced by head-neck surface cooling with ice bags, starting with reperfusion, plus peritoneal lavage as above, starting with ROSC. All 24 dogs were resuscitated. Initial head-neck surface cooling alone over 2 min decreased Tty by only 0.15 degrees C/min. Subsequent additional peritoneal lavage decreased Tty by a mean of 0.3 degrees C/min (11 min to 34 degrees C); and Tpa 0.6 degrees C/min (7 min to 34 degrees C). There were no significant physiologic effects. We conclude that peritoneal instillation of cold Ringer's solution is more rapidly effective than other non-intravascular cooling methods reported previously. Peritoneal cooling should be tried in patients during CPR.
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收藏
页码:51 / 59
页数:9
相关论文
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