Muizelaar J P, Marmarou A, DeSalles A A, Ward J D, Zimmerman R S, Li Z, Choi S C, Young H F
Department of Surgery, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.
J Neurosurg. 1989 Jul;71(1):63-71. doi: 10.3171/jns.1989.71.1.0063.
The literature suggests that in children with severe head injury, cerebral hyperemia is common and related to high intracranial pressure (ICP). However, there are very few data on cerebral blood flow (CBF) after severe head injury in children. This paper presents 72 measurements of cerebral blood flow ("CBF15"), using the 133Xe inhalation method, with multiple detectors over both hemispheres in 32 children aged 3 to 18 years (mean 13.6 years) with severe closed head injury (average Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score 5.4). In 25 of the children, these were combined with measurements of arteriojugular venous oxygen difference (AVDO2) and of cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2). In 30 patients, the first measurement was taken approximately 12 hours postinjury. In 18 patients, an indication of brain stiffness was obtained by withdrawal and injection of ventricular cerebrospinal fluid and calculation of the pressure-volume index (PVI) of Marmarou. The CBF and CMRO2 data were correlated with the GCS score, outcome, ICP, and PVI. Early after injury, CBF tended to be lower with lower GCS scores, but this was not statistically significant. This trend was reversed 24 hours postinjury, as significantly more hyperemic values were recorded the lower the GCS score, with the exception of the most severely injured patients (GCS score 3). In contrast, mean CMRO2 correlated positively with the GCS score and outcome throughout the course, but large standard deviations preclude making predictions based on CMRO2 measurements in individual patients. Early after injury, there was mild uncoupling between CBF and CMRO2 (CBF above metabolic demands, low AVDO2) and, after 24 hours, flow and metabolism were completely uncoupled with an extremely low AVDO2. Consistently reduced flow as found in only four patients; 28 patients (88%) showed hyperemia at some point in their course. This very high percentage of patients with hyperemia, combined with the lowest values of AVDO2 found in the literature, indicates that hyperemia or luxury perfusion is more prevalent in this group of patients. The three patients with consistently the highest CBF had consistently the lowest PVI: thus, the patients with the most severe hyperemia also had the stiffest brains. Nevertheless, and in contrast to previous reports, no correlation could be established between the course of ICP or PVI and the occurrence of hyperemia, nor was there a correlation between the levels of CBF and ICP at the time of the measurements. The authors argue that this lack of correlation is due to: 1) a definition of hyperemia that is too generous, and 2) the lack of a systematic relationship between CBF and cerebral blood volume
文献表明,在重度颅脑损伤患儿中,脑充血很常见且与高颅内压(ICP)有关。然而,关于儿童重度颅脑损伤后脑血流量(CBF)的数据非常少。本文介绍了采用133Xe吸入法,在32名3至18岁(平均13.6岁)重度闭合性颅脑损伤(平均格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分为5.4)患儿的双侧半球上使用多个探测器进行的72次脑血流量测量(“CBF15”)。在25名患儿中,这些测量与动脉-颈静脉血氧差(AVDO2)和脑氧代谢率(CMRO2)的测量相结合。在30名患者中,首次测量在受伤后约12小时进行。在18名患者中,通过抽取和注入脑室脑脊液并计算Marmarou压力-容积指数(PVI)获得脑僵硬度指标。CBF和CMRO2数据与GCS评分、预后、ICP和PVI相关。受伤早期,CBF往往随GCS评分降低而降低,但这无统计学意义。这种趋势在受伤后24小时逆转,因为GCS评分越低,记录到的充血值显著越高,但最严重受伤的患者(GCS评分为3分)除外。相比之下,整个病程中平均CMRO2与GCS评分和预后呈正相关,但较大的标准差使得无法根据个体患者的CMRO2测量进行预测。受伤早期,CBF与CMRO2之间存在轻度解偶联(CBF高于代谢需求,AVDO2低),24小时后,血流与代谢完全解偶联,AVDO2极低。仅4名患者出现持续血流减少;28名患者(88%)在病程中的某个时间点出现充血。充血患者的这一极高比例,加上文献中发现的最低AVDO2值,表明充血或过度灌注在这组患者中更为普遍。三名CBF始终最高的患者PVI始终最低:因此,充血最严重的患者脑僵硬度也最高。然而,与先前的报告相反,ICP或PVI的病程与充血的发生之间无法建立相关性,测量时CBF水平与ICP之间也无相关性。作者认为这种缺乏相关性的原因是:1)对充血的定义过于宽松,2)CBF与脑血容量之间缺乏系统关系