Zheng Rui-Zhe, Lei Zhong-Qi, Yang Run-Ze, Huang Guo-Hui, Zhang Guang-Ming
Department of Anesthesiology, Tongren Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
Department of Neurosurgery, The 901th Hospital of the Joint Logistics Support Force of PLA, Anhui, China.
Front Neurol. 2020 Feb 25;11:81. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00081. eCollection 2020.
Paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH) has predominantly been described after traumatic brain injury (TBI), which is associated with hyperthermia, hypertension, tachycardia, tachypnea, diaphoresis, dystonia (hypertonia or spasticity), and even motor features such as extensor/flexion posturing. Despite the pathophysiology of PSH not being completely understood, most researchers gradually agree that PSH is driven by the loss of the inhibition of excitation in the sympathetic nervous system without parasympathetic involvement. Recently, advances in the clinical and diagnostic features of PSH in TBI patients have reached a broad clinical consensus in many neurology departments. These advances should provide a more unanimous foundation for the systematic research on this clinical syndrome and its clear management. Clinically, a great deal of attention has been paid to the definition and diagnostic criteria, epidemiology and pathophysiology, symptomatic treatment, and prevention and control of secondary brain injury of PSH in TBI patients. Potential benefits of treatment for PSH may result from the three main goals: eliminating predisposing causes, mitigating excessive sympathetic outflow, and supportive therapy. However, individual pathophysiological differences, therapeutic responses and outcomes, and precision medicine approaches to PSH management are varied and inconsistent between studies. Further, many potential therapeutic drugs might suppress manifestations of PSH in the process of TBI treatment. The purpose of this review is to present current and comprehensive studies of the identification of PSH after TBI in the early stage and provide a framework for symptomatic management of TBI patients with PSH.
阵发性交感神经过度兴奋(PSH)主要在创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后出现,其与高热、高血压、心动过速、呼吸急促、多汗、肌张力障碍(张力亢进或痉挛),甚至诸如伸展/屈曲姿势等运动特征有关。尽管PSH的病理生理学尚未完全明确,但大多数研究人员逐渐达成共识,认为PSH是由交感神经系统中兴奋抑制的丧失所驱动,而副交感神经系统未参与其中。最近,TBI患者中PSH的临床和诊断特征方面的进展在许多神经科已达成广泛的临床共识。这些进展应为对该临床综合征及其明确管理的系统研究提供更一致的基础。临床上,TBI患者中PSH的定义和诊断标准、流行病学和病理生理学、对症治疗以及继发性脑损伤的预防和控制受到了极大关注。PSH治疗的潜在益处可能源于三个主要目标:消除诱发因素、减轻过度的交感神经输出以及支持性治疗。然而,个体的病理生理差异、治疗反应和结果以及PSH管理的精准医学方法在不同研究之间存在差异且不一致。此外,许多潜在的治疗药物可能在TBI治疗过程中抑制PSH的表现。本综述的目的是介绍目前关于TBI后早期PSH识别的全面研究,并为PSH的TBI患者的对症管理提供框架。