Chiu Camay, Heyer Eric J, Rampersad Anita D, Zurica Joseph, Ornstein Eugene, Sahlein Daniel H, Sciacca Robert R, Connolly E Sander
Department of Anesthesiology, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York, USA.
Neurosurgery. 2006 Jan;58(1):71-7; discussion 71-7. doi: 10.1227/01.neu.0000190662.71046.66.
Although magnesium provides cerebral protection in animal stroke models, magnesium therapy has significant side effects in humans. Therefore, we sought to examine the incidence of alpha-agonist treated hypotension in our ongoing, prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase I/IIa dose escalation study of magnesium therapy in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy.
Eighty patients undergoing elective carotid endarterectomy were randomly assigned to a placebo control group (n = 38) or to one of the three intravenous magnesium groups. Magnesium levels were obtained before induction, and then 15 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours, 6 hours, 12 hours, and 24 hours after a loading dose and infusion. After surgery, a target systolic blood pressure range was chosen, and the amount and duration of phenylephrine needed to maintain that pressure was compared across treatment groups.
All treatment groups achieved levels significantly different from baseline at 12 and 24 hours (P < 0.01). Magnesium treatment did not significantly increase the proportion of patients requiring pressure support. For those requiring pressure support, the amount and average duration of phenylephrine required was not different between control patients and those receiving magnesium, even when the individual minimum systolic blood pressures required were subdivided on the basis of dose of magnesium administered.
There were no significant differences detected in the 1) percentage of patients requiring pressor support, 2) the duration of postoperative pressor support, or 3) the amount of phenylephrine support needed between controls and magnesium treated patients. The percentage of patients requiring pressure support depended on the minimum systolic blood pressure ordered after surgery.
尽管镁在动物中风模型中具有脑保护作用,但镁疗法在人类中具有显著的副作用。因此,我们试图在正在进行的、前瞻性、随机、双盲、安慰剂对照的I/IIa期剂量递增研究中,研究α-激动剂治疗低血压在接受颈动脉内膜切除术患者镁疗法中的发生率。
80例接受择期颈动脉内膜切除术的患者被随机分配到安慰剂对照组(n = 38)或三个静脉注射镁组之一。在诱导前、负荷剂量和输注后15分钟、1小时、2小时、6小时、12小时和24小时获取镁水平。术后选择目标收缩压范围,并比较各治疗组维持该血压所需去氧肾上腺素的量和持续时间。
所有治疗组在12小时和24小时时的水平与基线相比均有显著差异(P < 0.01)。镁治疗并未显著增加需要压力支持的患者比例。对于那些需要压力支持的患者,对照组患者和接受镁治疗的患者所需去氧肾上腺素的量和平均持续时间并无差异,即使根据给予的镁剂量对个体所需的最低收缩压进行细分。
在1)需要升压支持的患者百分比、2)术后升压支持的持续时间或3)对照组和镁治疗患者之间所需去氧肾上腺素支持的量方面,未检测到显著差异。需要压力支持的患者百分比取决于术后规定的最低收缩压。