Natale JoAnne E, Guerguerian Anne-Marie, Joseph Jill G, McCarter Robert, Shao Cheng, Slomine Beth, Christensen James, Johnston Michael V, Shaffner Donald H
Research Center for Genetic Medicine, Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2007 Jan;8(1):1-9. doi: 10.1097/01.pcc.0000256620.55512.5f.
Magnesium sulfate is neuroprotective in preclinical models, but there are limited safety data regarding its clinical use for pediatric traumatic brain injury. We conducted a pilot study in children with severe traumatic brain injury to a) examine if magnesium sulfate decreases mean arterial pressure, decreases cerebral perfusion pressure, increases intracranial pressure, or adversely effects cardiac conduction; and b) determine the feasibility of a multiple-center trial of magnesium sulfate.
Double-blinded, placebo-controlled, randomized pilot trial with repeated measurement of hemodynamic variables.
Two pediatric trauma centers.
Six children (3 months to 18 yrs) with severe traumatic brain injury.
: Magnesium sulfate (50 mg/kg) bolus followed by (8.3 mg/kg/hr) infusion for 24 hr vs. equivolume placebo.
We screened 96 patients with severe traumatic brain injury during 24 months; 20 were eligible for enrollment, six provided informed consent, four received magnesium sulfate, and two received placebo. Before and after study drug infusion, we repeatedly measured blood ionized magnesium concentration, mean arterial pressure, cerebral perfusion pressure, intracranial pressure, heart rate, and corrected QT interval. Mean age (7.9 yrs), mean highest Glasgow Coma Scale score (6), gender (33% boys), inflicted injury rate (17%), and case mortality rate (17%) did not differ between those enrolled and those not enrolled. Compared with baseline, magnesium sulfate did not change cerebral perfusion pressure, intracranial pressure, heart rate, or corrected QT interval. Mean arterial pressure was unchanged until the late phase of magnesium sulfate infusion, when mean arterial pressure rose (82 +/- 5 vs. 93 +/- 6 mm Hg, p < .05). Sixty-four percent of corrected QT interval determinations obtained in the first 6 days after injury exceeded 440 msecs; 12% were >600 msecs.
In children with severe traumatic brain injury, magnesium sulfate administration did not decrease mean arterial pressure or cerebral perfusion pressure or adversely effect cardiac conduction. Our data suggest that enrollment of brain-injured children in a therapeutic trial remains challenging. These results provide information important for clinical trials of magnesium sulfate in children with severe traumatic brain injury.
硫酸镁在临床前模型中具有神经保护作用,但关于其用于小儿创伤性脑损伤临床治疗的安全性数据有限。我们对重度创伤性脑损伤患儿进行了一项初步研究,以:a)检查硫酸镁是否会降低平均动脉压、降低脑灌注压、升高颅内压或对心脏传导产生不利影响;b)确定硫酸镁多中心试验的可行性。
双盲、安慰剂对照、随机初步试验,重复测量血流动力学变量。
两个儿科创伤中心。
6名重度创伤性脑损伤患儿(3个月至18岁)。
硫酸镁(50mg/kg)推注,随后以(8.3mg/kg/小时)输注24小时,与等体积安慰剂对照。
在24个月内,我们筛查了96名重度创伤性脑损伤患者;20名符合入组条件,6名提供了知情同意,4名接受了硫酸镁治疗,2名接受了安慰剂治疗。在输注研究药物前后,我们反复测量血离子镁浓度、平均动脉压、脑灌注压、颅内压、心率和校正QT间期。入组患者与未入组患者的平均年龄(7.9岁)、平均最高格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分(6分)、性别(33%为男孩)、受伤率(17%)和病例死亡率(17%)无差异。与基线相比,硫酸镁未改变脑灌注压、颅内压、心率或校正QT间期。在硫酸镁输注后期,平均动脉压升高(82±5 vs. 93±6 mmHg,p<0.05)之前,平均动脉压无变化。受伤后前6天获得的校正QT间期测定值中有64%超过440毫秒;12%大于600毫秒。
在重度创伤性脑损伤患儿中,使用硫酸镁并未降低平均动脉压或脑灌注压,也未对心脏传导产生不利影响。我们的数据表明,将脑损伤患儿纳入治疗试验仍具有挑战性。这些结果为重度创伤性脑损伤患儿硫酸镁临床试验提供了重要信息。