Wong Andrew A, Read Stephen J
Department of Neurology, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Central Clinical School, School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Ann Indian Acad Neurol. 2008 Oct;11(4):207-20. doi: 10.4103/0972-2327.44555.
Several aspects of physiology, notably blood pressure, body temperature, blood glucose, and blood oxygen saturation, may be altered after an ischemic stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage. Generally, blood pressure and temperature rise acutely after a stroke, before returning to normal. Blood glucose and oxygen levels may be abnormal in individuals, but they do not follow a set pattern. Several aspects of these physiological alterations remain unclear, including their principal determinants - whether they genuinely affect prognosis (as opposed to merely representing underlying processes such as inflammation or a stress response), whether these effects are adaptive or maladaptive, whether the effects are specific to certain subgroups (e.g. lacunar stroke) and whether modifying physiology also modifies its prognostic effect. Hypertension and hyperglycemia may be helpful or harmful, depending on the perfusion status after an ischemic stroke; the therapeutic response to their lowering may be correspondingly variable. Hypothermia may provide benefits, in addition to preventing harm through protection from hyperthermia. Hypoxia is harmful, but normobaric hyperoxia is unhelpful or even harmful in normoxic patients. Hyperbaric hyperoxia, however, may be beneficial, though this remains unproven. The above-mentioned uncertainties necessitate generally conservative measures for physiology management, although there are notably specific recommendations for thrombolysis-eligible patients. Stroke unit care is associated with better outcome, possibly through better management of poststroke physiology. Stroke units can also facilitate research to clarify the relationship between physiology and prognosis, and to subsequently clarify management guidelines.
缺血性卒中和脑出血后,生理学的几个方面,尤其是血压、体温、血糖和血氧饱和度,可能会发生改变。一般来说,中风后血压和体温会急剧上升,然后恢复正常。个体的血糖和血氧水平可能异常,但并无固定模式。这些生理改变的几个方面仍不清楚,包括其主要决定因素——它们是否真的影响预后(与仅仅代表炎症或应激反应等潜在过程相反),这些影响是适应性的还是适应不良的,这些影响是否特定于某些亚组(如腔隙性卒中),以及调节生理状态是否也会改变其预后效果。高血压和高血糖可能有益也可能有害,这取决于缺血性卒中后的灌注状态;降低血压和血糖的治疗反应可能相应地有所不同。低温可能有益,此外还能通过防止高热造成损害。缺氧是有害的,但常压高氧对正常氧合患者无益甚至有害。然而,高压高氧可能有益,尽管这一点尚未得到证实。上述不确定性使得生理学管理通常采取保守措施,不过对于符合溶栓条件的患者有明确的具体建议。卒中单元护理与更好的预后相关,可能是通过更好地管理卒中后的生理状态实现的。卒中单元还可以促进研究,以阐明生理学与预后之间的关系,并随后明确管理指南。