Laptook Abbot, Tyson Jon, Shankaran Seetha, McDonald Scott, Ehrenkranz Richard, Fanaroff Avroy, Donovan Edward, Goldberg Ronald, O'Shea T Michael, Higgins Rosemary D, Poole W Kenneth
Department of Pediatrics, Women and Infants' Hospital of Rhode Island, 101 Dudley St, Providence, RI 02906, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Sep;122(3):491-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-1673.
The goal was to determine whether the risk of death or moderate/severe disability in term infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy increases with relatively high esophageal or skin temperature occurring between 6 and 78 hours after birth.
This was an observational secondary study within the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Neonatal Research Network randomized trial comparing whole-body cooling and usual care (control) for term infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. Esophageal and skin temperatures were recorded serially for 72 hours. Each infant's temperatures for each site were rank ordered. The high temperature was defined for each infant as the mean of all temperature measurements in the upper quartile. The low temperature was similarly defined as the mean of the lower quartile. Outcomes were related to temperatures in 3 logistic regression analyses for the high, median, and low temperatures at each temperature site for each group, with adjustment for the level of encephalopathy, gender, gestational age, and race.
In control infants, the mean esophageal temperature was 37.2 +/- 0.7 degrees C over the 72-hour period, and 63%, 22%, and 8% of all temperatures were >37 degrees C, >37.5 degrees C, and >38 degrees C, respectively. The mean skin temperature was 36.5 +/- 0.8 degrees C, and 12%, 5%, and 2% of all temperatures were >37 degrees C, >37.5 degrees C, and >38 degrees C, respectively. The odds of death or disability were increased 3.6-4 fold for each 1 degrees C increase in the highest quartile of skin or esophageal temperatures. There were no associations between temperatures and outcomes in the cooling-treated group.
Relatively high temperatures during usual care after hypoxia-ischemia were associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes. The results may reflect underlying brain injury and/or adverse effects of temperature on outcomes.
确定出生后6至78小时内出现相对较高的食管温度或皮肤温度时,足月儿缺氧缺血性脑病的死亡或中度/重度残疾风险是否会增加。
这是一项在国家儿童健康与人类发展研究所新生儿研究网络随机试验中的观察性二次研究,该试验比较了全身冷却和常规护理(对照)对足月儿缺氧缺血性脑病的效果。连续记录食管和皮肤温度72小时。对每个婴儿每个部位的温度进行排序。每个婴儿的高温定义为上四分位数中所有温度测量值的平均值。低温同样定义为下四分位数的平均值。在3项逻辑回归分析中,将结局与每组每个温度部位的高、中、低温相关联,并对脑病程度、性别、胎龄和种族进行调整。
在对照婴儿中,72小时内平均食管温度为37.2±0.7℃,所有温度中分别有63%、22%和8%高于37℃、37.5℃和38℃。平均皮肤温度为36.5±0.8℃,所有温度中分别有12%、5%和2%高于37℃、37.5℃和38℃。皮肤或食管温度最高四分位数每升高1℃,死亡或残疾的几率增加3.6至4倍。在冷却治疗组中,温度与结局之间无关联。
缺氧缺血后常规护理期间相对较高的温度与不良结局风险增加相关。结果可能反映了潜在的脑损伤和/或温度对结局的不良影响。