Todd Michael M, Hindman Bradley J, Clarke William R, Torner James C, Weeks Julie B, Bayman Emine O, Shi Qian, Spofford Christina M
Department of Anesthesia, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA. michael-
Neurosurgery. 2009 May;64(5):897-908; discussion 908. doi: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000341903.11527.2F.
We examined the incidence of perioperative fever and its relationship to outcome among patients enrolled in the Intraoperative Hypothermia for Aneurysm Surgery Trial.
One thousand patients with initial World Federation of Neurological Surgeons grades of I to III undergoing clipping of intracranial aneurysms after subarachnoid hemorrhage were randomized to intraoperative normothermia (36 degrees C-37 degrees C) or hypothermia (32.5 degrees C-33.5 degrees C). Fever (> or =38.5 degrees C) and other complications (including infections) occurring between admission and discharge (or death) were recorded. Functional and neuropsychologic outcomes were assessed 3 months postoperatively. The primary outcome variable for the trial was dichotomized Glasgow Outcome Scale (good outcome versus all others).
Fever was reported in 41% of patients. In 97% of these, fever occurred in the postoperative period. The median time from surgery to first fever was 3 days. All measures of outcome were worse in patients who developed fever, even in those without infections or who were World Federation of Neurological Surgeons grade I. Logistic regression analyses were performed to adjust for differences in preoperative factors (e.g., age, Fisher grade, initial neurological status). This demonstrated that fever continued to be significantly associated with most outcome measures, even when infection was added to the model. An alternative stepwise model selection process including all fever-related measures from the preoperative and intraoperative period (e.g., hydrocephalus, duration of surgery, intraoperative blood loss) resulted in the loss of significance for dichotomized Glasgow Outcome Scale, but significant associations between fever and several other outcome measures remained. After adding postoperative delayed ischemic neurological deficits to the model, only worsened National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, Barthel Activities of Daily Living index, and discharge destination (home versus other) remained independently associated with fever.
These findings suggest that fever is associated with worsened outcome in surgical subarachnoid hemorrhage patients, although, because the association between fever and the primary outcome measure for the trial is dependent on the covariates used in the analysis (particularly operative events and delayed ischemic neurological deficits), we cannot rule out the possibility that fever is a marker for other events. Only a formal trial of fever treatment or prevention can address this issue.
我们研究了参与动脉瘤手术术中低温试验的患者围手术期发热的发生率及其与预后的关系。
1000例蛛网膜下腔出血后行颅内动脉瘤夹闭术、世界神经外科医师联合会(WFNS)分级最初为Ⅰ至Ⅲ级的患者被随机分为术中正常体温组(36℃ - 37℃)或低温组(32.5℃ - 33.5℃)。记录入院至出院(或死亡)期间出现的发热(≥38.5℃)及其他并发症(包括感染)。术后3个月评估功能和神经心理学预后。该试验的主要结局变量为二分法格拉斯哥预后量表(良好预后与其他所有情况)。
41%的患者报告有发热。其中97%的患者发热发生在术后。从手术到首次发热的中位时间为3天。发热患者的所有预后指标均较差,即使是那些没有感染或WFNS分级为Ⅰ级的患者。进行逻辑回归分析以调整术前因素(如年龄、Fisher分级、初始神经状态)的差异。这表明即使在模型中加入感染因素,发热仍与大多数预后指标显著相关。另一种逐步模型选择过程包括术前和术中所有与发热相关的指标(如脑积水、手术时长、术中失血),导致二分法格拉斯哥预后量表失去显著性,但发热与其他几个预后指标之间仍存在显著关联。在模型中加入术后迟发性缺血性神经功能缺损后,只有美国国立卫生研究院卒中量表评分恶化、Barthel日常生活活动指数及出院去向(回家与其他)仍与发热独立相关。
这些发现表明,发热与蛛网膜下腔出血手术患者预后恶化相关,尽管由于发热与该试验主要结局指标之间的关联取决于分析中使用的协变量(特别是手术事件和迟发性缺血性神经功能缺损),我们不能排除发热是其他事件标志物的可能性。只有发热治疗或预防的正式试验才能解决这个问题。