Bellapart Judith, Cuthbertson Kylie, Dunster Kimble, Diab Sara, Platts David G, Raffel O Christopher, Gabrielian Levon, Barnett Adrian, Paratz Jenifer, Boots Rob, Fraser John F
Department of Intensive Care, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital , Herston, QLD , Australia.
Critical Care Research Group, University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia; Medical Engineering Research Facility, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Front Neurol. 2016 Feb 2;7:6. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2016.00006. eCollection 2016.
Anemia is accepted among critically ill patients as an alternative to elective blood transfusion. This practice has been extrapolated to head injury patients with only one study comparing the effects of mild anemia on neurological outcome. There are no studies quantifying microcirculation during anemia. Experimental studies suggest that anemia leads to cerebral hypoxia and increased rates of infarction, but the lack of clinical equipoise, when testing the cerebral effects of transfusion among critically injured patients, supports the need of experimental studies. The aim of this study was to quantify cerebral microcirculation and the potential presence of axonal damage in an experimental model exposed to normovolaemic anemia, with the intention of describing possible limitations within management practices in critically ill patients. Under non-recovered anesthesia, six Merino sheep were instrumented using an intracardiac transeptal catheter to inject coded microspheres into the left atrium to ensure systemic and non-chaotic distribution. Cytometric analyses quantified cerebral microcirculation at specific regions of the brain. Amyloid precursor protein staining was used as an indicator of axonal damage. Animals were exposed to normovolaemic anemia by blood extractions from the indwelling arterial catheter with simultaneous fluid replacement through a venous central catheter. Simultaneous data recording from cerebral tissue oxygenation, intracranial pressure, and cardiac output was monitored. A regression model was used to examine the effects of anemia on microcirculation with a mixed model to control for repeated measures. Homogeneous and normal cerebral microcirculation with no evidence of axonal damage was present in all cerebral regions, with no temporal variability, concluding that acute normovolaemic anemia does not result in short-term effects on cerebral microcirculation in the ovine brain.
在重症患者中,贫血被视为择期输血的替代方案。这种做法已被推广到颅脑损伤患者,仅有一项研究比较了轻度贫血对神经功能结局的影响。目前尚无研究对贫血期间的微循环进行量化。实验研究表明,贫血会导致脑缺氧和梗死率增加,但在对重症受伤患者进行输血的脑效应测试时,由于缺乏临床平衡,支持了开展实验研究的必要性。本研究的目的是在一个暴露于正常血容量性贫血的实验模型中,量化脑微循环以及轴突损伤的潜在存在情况,旨在描述重症患者管理实践中可能存在的局限性。在未苏醒的麻醉状态下,对6只美利奴羊使用心内跨中隔导管进行插管,以便将编码微球注入左心房,以确保全身均匀分布且无紊乱。细胞计数分析对脑特定区域的脑微循环进行了量化。淀粉样前体蛋白染色被用作轴突损伤的指标。通过从留置动脉导管抽血使动物暴露于正常血容量性贫血,同时通过中心静脉导管进行液体置换。同时监测脑组织氧合、颅内压和心输出量的数据记录。使用回归模型检查贫血对微循环的影响,并使用混合模型控制重复测量。所有脑区均存在均匀且正常的脑微循环,且无轴突损伤迹象,无时间变异性,得出急性正常血容量性贫血不会对绵羊脑的脑微循环产生短期影响的结论。