Georgoff Patrick E, Nikolian Vahagn C, Halaweish Ihab, Chtraklin Kiril, Bruhn Peter J, Eidy Hassan, Rasmussen Monica, Li Yongqing, Srinivasan Ashok, Alam Hasan B
1 Department of Surgery, Section of Neuroradiology, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, Michigan.
2 Department of Radiology, Section of Neuroradiology, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, Michigan.
J Neurotrauma. 2017 Jul 1;34(13):2167-2175. doi: 10.1089/neu.2016.4859. Epub 2017 Apr 25.
We have shown previously that fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and lyophilized plasma (LP) decrease brain lesion size and improve neurological recovery in a swine model of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and hemorrhagic shock (HS). In this study, we examine whether these findings can be validated in a clinically relevant model of severe TBI, HS, and polytrauma. Female Yorkshire swine were subjected to TBI (controlled cortical impact), hemorrhage (40% volume), grade III liver and splenic injuries, rib fracture, and rectus abdominis crush. The animals were maintained in a state of shock (mean arterial pressure 30-35 mm Hg) for 2 h, and then randomized to resuscitation with normal saline (NS), FFP, or LP (n = 5 swine/group). Animals were recovered and monitored for 30 d, during which time neurological recovery was assessed. Brain lesion sizes were measured via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on post-injury days (PID) three and 10. Animals were euthanized on PID 30. The severity of shock and response to resuscitation was similar in all groups. When compared with NS-treated animals, plasma-treated animals (FFP and LP) had significantly lower neurologic severity scores (PID 1-7) and a faster return to baseline neurological function. There was no significant difference in brain lesion sizes between groups. LP treatment was well tolerated and similar to FFP. In this clinically relevant large animal model of severe TBI, HS, and polytrauma, we have shown that plasma-based resuscitation strategies are safe and result in neurocognitive recovery that is faster than recovery after NS-based resuscitation.
我们之前已经表明,在创伤性脑损伤(TBI)和失血性休克(HS)的猪模型中,新鲜冷冻血浆(FFP)和冻干血浆(LP)可减小脑损伤大小并改善神经功能恢复。在本研究中,我们检验这些发现是否能在严重TBI、HS和多发伤的临床相关模型中得到验证。雌性约克夏猪接受TBI(控制性皮质撞击)、出血(40%血容量)、III级肝脾损伤、肋骨骨折和腹直肌挤压伤。动物维持休克状态(平均动脉压30 - 35 mmHg)2小时,然后随机分为用生理盐水(NS)、FFP或LP进行复苏(每组n = 5头猪)。动物恢复并监测30天,在此期间评估神经功能恢复情况。在伤后第3天和第10天通过磁共振成像(MRI)测量脑损伤大小。在伤后第30天对动物实施安乐死。所有组的休克严重程度和对复苏的反应相似。与接受NS治疗的动物相比,接受血浆治疗的动物(FFP和LP)神经严重程度评分显著更低(伤后第1 - 7天),且更快恢复至基线神经功能。各组间脑损伤大小无显著差异。LP治疗耐受性良好,与FFP相似。在这个严重TBI、HS和多发伤的临床相关大型动物模型中,我们已经表明基于血浆的复苏策略是安全的,并且导致神经认知恢复比基于NS的复苏更快。