Macey Paul M, Woo Mary A, Harper Ronald M
Department of Neurobiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2007 May;4(5):e173. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0040173.
Hyperoxic ventilation (>21% O2) is widely used in medical practice for resuscitation, stroke intervention, and chronic supplementation. However, despite the objective of improving tissue oxygen delivery, hyperoxic ventilation can accentuate ischemia and impair that outcome. Hyperoxia results in, paradoxically, increased ventilation, which leads to hypocapnia, diminishing cerebral blood flow and hindering oxygen delivery. Hyperoxic delivery induces other systemic changes, including increased plasma insulin and glucagon levels and reduced myocardial contractility and relaxation, which may derive partially from neurally mediated hormonal and sympathetic outflow. Several cortical, limbic, and cerebellar brain areas regulate these autonomic processes. The aim of this study was to assess recruitment of these regions in response to hyperoxia and to determine whether any response would be countered by addition of CO2 to the hyperoxic gas mixture.
We studied 14 children (mean age 11 y, range 8-15 y). We found, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, that 2 min of hyperoxic ventilation (100% O2) following a room air baseline elicited pronounced responses in autonomic and hormonal control areas, including the hypothalamus, insula, and hippocampus, throughout the challenge. The addition of 5% CO2 to 95% O2 abolished responses in the hypothalamus and lingual gyrus, substantially reduced insular, hippocampal, thalamic, and cerebellar patterns in the first 48 s, and abolished signals in those sites thereafter. Only the dorsal midbrain responded to hypercapnia, but not hyperoxia.
In this group of children, hyperoxic ventilation led to responses in brain areas that modify hypothalamus-mediated sympathetic and hormonal outflow; these responses were diminished by addition of CO2 to the gas mixture. This study in healthy children suggests that supplementing hyperoxic administration with CO2 may mitigate central and peripheral consequences of hyperoxia.
高氧通气(氧气浓度>21%)在医学实践中广泛用于复苏、中风干预和长期补充氧气。然而,尽管其目的是改善组织氧输送,但高氧通气会加重局部缺血并损害治疗效果。矛盾的是,高氧会导致通气增加,进而引起低碳酸血症,减少脑血流量并阻碍氧输送。高氧输送还会引发其他全身变化,包括血浆胰岛素和胰高血糖素水平升高以及心肌收缩力和舒张功能降低,这些变化可能部分源于神经介导的激素和交感神经输出。几个皮质、边缘和小脑脑区调节这些自主过程。本研究的目的是评估这些区域对高氧的反应,并确定向高氧气体混合物中添加二氧化碳是否会抵消任何反应。
我们研究了14名儿童(平均年龄11岁,范围8 - 15岁)。我们使用功能磁共振成像发现,在室内空气基线后进行2分钟的高氧通气(100%氧气),在整个挑战过程中,自主神经和激素控制区域,包括下丘脑、脑岛和海马体,都会出现明显反应。在95%氧气中添加5%二氧化碳可消除下丘脑和舌回的反应,在最初48秒内显著降低脑岛、海马体、丘脑和小脑的反应模式,此后这些部位的信号消失。只有中脑背侧对高碳酸血症有反应,而对高氧无反应。
在这组儿童中,高氧通气导致调节下丘脑介导的交感神经和激素输出的脑区出现反应;向气体混合物中添加二氧化碳可减弱这些反应。这项对健康儿童的研究表明,在高氧给药中补充二氧化碳可能减轻高氧的中枢和外周影响。