Department of Neurosurgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Yuzhong District, Chongqing 400016, China.
J Clin Neurosci. 2010 Feb;17(2):196-200. doi: 10.1016/j.jocn.2009.05.022. Epub 2009 Dec 29.
Mild hypothermia has an important role in the treatment of severe brain injury and there are therapeutic windows for this technique for patients with severe brain injury. We used a randomized, controlled, clinical study to investigate indexes of cerebral oxygen metabolism and neuroelectrophysiology to evaluate the efficacy of mild hypothermia treatment in severe brain injury. A total of 148 patients (106 males and 42 females), aged 18 to 64 years with acute severe brain injury were selected from June 1998 to June 2004 from the Department of Neurosurgery at The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University. All patients met the inclusion criteria: admission to hospital within 10 hours of injury; Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score 8; age < 65 years; no other severe combined visceral injury; and no severe co-morbidities of the heart, lung, liver, kidney, or other visceral organs. Patients were divided into groups according to brain injury severity: GCS scores 7-8, 5-6, and 3-4. Patients in each GCS score group were randomly assigned to two subgroups: hypothermia and normothermia. Brain oxygen metabolism indexes (partial pressure of oxygen in brain tissue [P(br)O(2)] and regional cerebral oxygen saturation [rSaO(2)]) as well as neuroelectrophysiology indexes (short-latency somatosensory evoked potential [SLSEP] and brain-stem auditory evoked potential [BAEP]) were recorded in the normothermia and hypothermia subgroups (32-34 degrees C) prior to and after cooling for 5 days. Brain oxygen metabolism indexes (P(br)O(2) and rSaO(2)) and neuroelectrophysiology indexes (SLSEP and BAEP) were also compared for patients who underwent mild hypothermia and those who did not. For patients with GCS 7-8, SLSEP, BAEP and rSaO(2) following cooling were significantly improved in the hypothermia subgroup and the P(br)O(2) was less in the hypothermia subgroup. For patients with GCS 5-6, the SLSEP, BAEP and rSaO(2) were improved following hypothermia on some days, and the PbrO(2) was greater in the hypothermia subgroup on some days. For patients with GCS 3-4, there was no difference between the hypothermia and normothermia subgroups. We conclude that hypothermia had a significant therapeutic effect on severe brain injury of patients with GCS 7-8, had no effect on patients with GCS 3-4, and an uncertain effect on patients with GCS 5-6. The indexes of cerebral oxygen metabolism and neuroelectrophysiology indicated primary and secondary brain injury, respectively, and provided an effective way to evaluate brain injury.
轻度低温在严重脑损伤的治疗中具有重要作用,并且对于严重脑损伤患者,这种技术存在治疗窗。我们使用随机、对照、临床研究来调查脑氧代谢和神经电生理学指标,以评估轻度低温治疗严重脑损伤的疗效。共有 148 名(男 106 名,女 42 名)年龄 18 至 64 岁的急性严重脑损伤患者于 1998 年 6 月至 2004 年 6 月从重庆医科大学第一附属医院神经外科入选。所有患者均符合纳入标准:损伤后 10 小时内入院;格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分 8 分;年龄<65 岁;无其他严重合并内脏损伤;无严重的心肺肝肾等内脏器官合并症。根据脑损伤严重程度将患者分为 GCS 评分 7-8、5-6 和 3-4 组。每组 GCS 评分的患者随机分为低温组和常温组。在冷却前和冷却后 5 天,分别记录常温组和低温组(32-34°C)的脑氧代谢指标(脑组织氧分压[P(br)O(2)]和局部脑氧饱和度[rSaO(2)])以及神经电生理学指标(短潜伏期体感诱发电位[SLSEP]和脑干听觉诱发电位[BAEP])。还比较了接受和未接受轻度低温治疗的患者的脑氧代谢指标(P(br)O(2)和 rSaO(2))和神经电生理学指标(SLSEP 和 BAEP)。对于 GCS 7-8 的患者,低温组冷却后 SLSEP、BAEP 和 rSaO(2)明显改善,P(br)O(2)降低。对于 GCS 5-6 的患者,低温后某些天 SLSEP、BAEP 和 rSaO(2)改善,低温组某些天 PbrO(2)增加。对于 GCS 3-4 的患者,低温组和常温组之间无差异。我们得出结论,低温对 GCS 7-8 的严重脑损伤患者有显著疗效,对 GCS 3-4 的患者无效,对 GCS 5-6 的患者疗效不确定。脑氧代谢和神经电生理学指标分别反映原发性和继发性脑损伤,为评估脑损伤提供了有效的方法。