Weiskopf R B, Kramer J H, Viele M, Neumann M, Feiner J R, Watson J J, Hopf H W, Toy P
Departments of Anesthesia, the Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0648, USA.
Anesthesiology. 2000 Jun;92(6):1646-52. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200006000-00023.
Erythrocytes are transfused to prevent or treat inadequate oxygen delivery resulting from insufficient hemoglobin concentration. Previous studies failed to find evidence of inadequate systemic oxygen delivery at a hemoglobin concentration of 5 g/dl. However, in those studies, sensitive, specific measures of critical organ function were not used. This study tested the hypothesis that acute severe decreases of hemoglobin concentration alters human cognitive function.
Nine healthy volunteers, age 29 +/- 5 yr (mean +/- SD), were tested with verbal memory and standard, computerized neuropsychologic tests before and after acute isovolemic reduction of their hemoglobin to 7, 6, and 5 g/dl and again after transfusion of their autologous erythrocytes to return their hemoglobin concentration to 7 g/dl. To control for duration of the experiment, each volunteer also completed the same tests on a separate day, without alteration of hemoglobin, at times of the day approximately equivalent to those on the experimental day.
No test showed any change in reaction time or error rate at hemoglobin concentration of 7 g/dl compared with the data at the baseline hemoglobin concentration of 14 g/dl. Reaction time, but not error rate, for horizontal addition and digit-symbol substitution test (DSST) increased at hemoglobin 6 g/dl (mean horizontal addition, 19%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 4-34%; mean DSST, 10%; 95% CI, 4-17%) and further at 5 g/dl (mean horizontal addition, 43%; 95% CI, 6-79%; mean DSST, 18%; 95% CI, 4-31%). Immediate and delayed memory was degraded at hemoglobin 5 g/dl but not at 6 g/dl. Return of hemoglobin to 7 g/dl returned all tests to baseline, except for the DSST, which significantly improved, and returned to baseline the following morning after transfusion of all autologous erythrocytes.
Acute reduction of hemoglobin concentration to 7 g/dl does not produce detectable changes in human cognitive function. Further reduction of hemoglobin level to 6 and 5 g/dl produces subtle, reversible increases in reaction time and impaired immediate and delayed memory. These are the first prospective data to demonstrate subtle degraded human function with acute anemia of hemoglobin concentrations of 6 and 5 g/dl. This reversibility of these decrements with erythrocyte transfusion suggests that our model can be used to test the efficacy of erythrocytes, oxygen therapeutics, or other treatments for acute anemia.
输注红细胞是为了预防或治疗因血红蛋白浓度不足导致的氧输送不足。以往的研究未能找到血红蛋白浓度为5 g/dl时存在全身氧输送不足的证据。然而,在这些研究中,并未使用对关键器官功能敏感且特异的测量方法。本研究检验了血红蛋白浓度急性严重降低会改变人类认知功能这一假设。
9名年龄为29±5岁(均值±标准差)的健康志愿者,在急性等容性降低血红蛋白至7、6和5 g/dl之前和之后,以及在输注自体红细胞使血红蛋白浓度恢复至7 g/dl之后,接受了言语记忆测试以及标准的计算机化神经心理学测试。为了控制实验时长,每位志愿者还在单独的一天,在与实验日大致相同的时间段,在未改变血红蛋白的情况下完成了相同的测试。
与血红蛋白基线浓度14 g/dl时的数据相比,在血红蛋白浓度为7 g/dl时,没有测试显示反应时间或错误率有任何变化。在血红蛋白为6 g/dl时,水平加法和数字符号替换测试(DSST)的反应时间增加,但错误率未增加(水平加法均值增加19%;95%置信区间[CI],4 - 34%;DSST均值增加10%;95% CI,4 - 17%),在血红蛋白为5 g/dl时进一步增加(水平加法均值增加43%;95% CI,6 - 79%;DSST均值增加18%;95% CI,4 - 31%)。即时和延迟记忆在血红蛋白为5 g/dl时下降,但在6 g/dl时未下降。血红蛋白恢复至7 g/dl后,除DSST显著改善外,所有测试均恢复至基线水平,且在输注所有自体红细胞后的次日早晨DSST也恢复至基线水平。
血红蛋白浓度急性降低至7 g/dl不会在人类认知功能上产生可检测到变化。血红蛋白水平进一步降至6和5 g/dl会使反应时间出现细微的、可逆的增加,并损害即时和延迟记忆。这是首批前瞻性数据,证明了血红蛋白浓度为6和5 g/dl的急性贫血会导致人类功能出现细微下降。这些因红细胞输注而产生的下降的可逆性表明,我们的模型可用于测试红细胞、氧治疗药物或其他治疗急性贫血的方法的疗效。