Johansson Jakob, Gedeborg Rolf, Basu Samar, Rubertsson Sten
Department of Surgical Sciences - Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Uppsala University Hospital, S-751 85 Uppsala, Sweden.
Resuscitation. 2003 Jun;57(3):299-307. doi: 10.1016/s0300-9572(03)00031-5.
To study the effects of continuously administered adrenaline (epinephrine), compared to bolus doses, on the dynamics of cortical cerebral blood flow during experimental cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), and after restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC).
Ventricular fibrillation was induced in 24 anaesthetised pigs. After a 5-min non-intervention interval, closed-chest CPR was started. The animals were randomised into two groups. One group received three boluses of adrenaline (20 microg/kg) at 3-min intervals. The other group received an initial bolus of adrenaline (20 microg/kg) followed by an infusion of adrenaline (10 microg/kg x min). After 9 min of CPR, defibrillation was attempted, and if spontaneous circulation was achieved the adrenaline infusion was stopped. Cortical cerebral blood flow was measured continuously using Laser-Doppler flowmetry. Jugular bulb oxygen saturation was measured to reflect global cerebral oxygenation. Repeated measurements of 8-iso-prostaglandin F(2alpha) (8-iso-PGF(2alpha)) in jugular bulb plasma were performed to evaluate cerebral oxidative injury.
During CPR mean cortical cerebral blood flow was significantly higher (P=0.009) with a continuous adrenaline infusion than with repeated bolus doses. Following ROSC there was no significant difference in cortical cerebral blood flow between the two study groups. No differences in coronary perfusion pressure, rate of ROSC, jugular bulb oxygen saturation or 8-iso-PGF(2alpha) were seen between the study groups.
Continuous infusion of adrenaline (10 microg/kg x min) generated a more sustained increase in cortical cerebral blood flow during CPR as compared to intermittent bolus doses (20 microg/kg every third minute). Thus, continuous infusion might be a more appropriate way to administer adrenaline as compared to bolus doses during CPR.
研究与大剂量推注相比,持续输注肾上腺素对实验性心肺复苏(CPR)期间及自主循环恢复(ROSC)后大脑皮质血流动力学的影响。
对24只麻醉猪诱发室颤。在5分钟的非干预间隔后,开始进行闭胸CPR。将动物随机分为两组。一组每隔3分钟接受三次大剂量推注肾上腺素(20微克/千克)。另一组先接受一次大剂量推注肾上腺素(20微克/千克),随后持续输注肾上腺素(10微克/千克·分钟)。CPR进行9分钟后,尝试除颤,如果实现自主循环,则停止肾上腺素输注。使用激光多普勒血流仪持续测量大脑皮质血流。测量颈静脉球血氧饱和度以反映全脑氧合情况。对颈静脉球血浆中的8-异前列腺素F2α(8-iso-PGF2α)进行重复测量,以评估脑氧化损伤。
在CPR期间,持续输注肾上腺素时大脑皮质平均血流显著高于重复大剂量推注(P = 0.009)。ROSC后,两个研究组之间大脑皮质血流无显著差异。研究组之间在冠状动脉灌注压、ROSC率、颈静脉球血氧饱和度或8-iso-PGF2α方面未见差异。
与间歇性大剂量推注(每三分钟20微克/千克)相比,持续输注肾上腺素(10微克/千克·分钟)在CPR期间能使大脑皮质血流持续增加更多。因此,与大剂量推注相比,持续输注可能是CPR期间给予肾上腺素更合适的方式。