Gunn Alistair J, Thoresen Marianne
Departments of Physiology and Paediatrics, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Department of Physiology University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway; Neonatal Neuroscience, Translational Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Handb Clin Neurol. 2019;162:217-237. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-64029-1.00010-2.
Acute hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy around the time of birth remains a major cause of death and life-long disability. The key insight that led to the modern revival of studies of neuroprotection was that, after profound asphyxia, many brain cells show initial recovery from the insult during a short "latent" phase, typically lasting approximately 6h, only to die hours to days later after a "secondary" deterioration characterized by seizures, cytotoxic edema, and progressive failure of cerebral oxidative metabolism. Studies designed around this framework showed that mild hypothermia initiated as early as possible before the onset of secondary deterioration and continued for a sufficient duration to allow the secondary deterioration to resolve is associated with potent, long-lasting neuroprotection. There is now compelling evidence from randomized controlled trials that mild to moderate induced hypothermia significantly improves survival and neurodevelopmental outcomes in infancy and mid-childhood.
出生前后的急性缺氧缺血性脑病仍然是死亡和终身残疾的主要原因。促成神经保护研究现代复兴的关键见解是,在严重窒息后,许多脑细胞在短暂的“潜伏期”(通常持续约6小时)内会从损伤中初步恢复,但在数小时至数天后,会经历以癫痫发作、细胞毒性水肿和脑氧化代谢逐渐衰竭为特征的“继发性”恶化,最终死亡。围绕这一框架开展的研究表明,在继发性恶化开始前尽早启动轻度低温治疗,并持续足够长的时间以使继发性恶化得到缓解,与强大而持久的神经保护作用相关。目前,随机对照试验提供了令人信服的证据,表明轻度至中度诱导低温可显著改善婴儿期和儿童中期的存活率及神经发育结局。