Division of Laboratory Animal Medicine, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee.
Comp Med. 2022 Feb 1;72(1):30-37. doi: 10.30802/AALAS-CM-21-000067. Epub 2021 Nov 23.
Acute spinal cord injury (ASCI) is a devastating event that can have severe hemodynamic consequences, depending on location and severity of the lesion. Knowledge of hyperacute hemodynamic changes is important for researchers using porcine models of thoracic ASCI. The goal of this study was to determine the hyperacute hemodynamic changes observed after ASCI when using pigs as their own controls. Five Yucatan gilts were anesthetized, and a dorsal laminectomy performed at T10-T12. Standardized blunt trauma was applied for 5 consecutive min, and hemodynamic variables were collected 5 min before ASCI, and at 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 20, 30, 60, 80 and 120 min after ASCI. Arterial blood gas samples were collected at 60 min and 10 min before, and at 30 min and between 120 and 240 min after ASCI. Parametric data were analyzed using a mixed effects model with time point as the fixed factor and subject as the random factor. We found no effect on heart rate, pulse pressure, SpO₂, EtCO₂, and respiratory rate between baseline and timepoints after ASCI. Diastolic arterial pressure, mean arterial pressure, and systolic arterial pressure fell significantly by 18%, 16%, and 15%, respectively, at 2 min after ASCI. However, none of the decrements in arterial pressures resulted in hypotension at any time point. Heart rate did not change significantly after ASCI. Blood glucose progressively increased to 50% above baseline between 120 and 240 minutes after ASCI. Low thoracic ASCI caused a consistent and statistically significant but clinically minor hyperacute decrease in arterial pressures (-15%) that did not produce hypotension or metabolic changes suggestive of tissue hypoperfusion. Our findings using this model suggest that mean arterial pressures should be maintained above 85 mm Hg prior to spinal trauma in order to avoid hypotensive states after ASCI.
急性脊髓损伤(ASCI)是一种破坏性事件,其血流动力学后果取决于损伤的位置和严重程度。了解超急性血流动力学变化对于使用猪 ASCI 模型的研究人员非常重要。本研究的目的是确定在使用猪作为自身对照的情况下,ASCI 后观察到的超急性血流动力学变化。5 头 Yucatan 小母猪被麻醉,并在 T10-T12 进行背侧椎板切除术。连续 5 分钟施加标准化钝性创伤,并在 ASCI 前 5 分钟、ASCI 后 2、4、6、8、10、20、30、60、80 和 120 分钟收集血流动力学变量。在 ASCI 后 60 分钟和 10 分钟前以及 30 分钟和 120 分钟至 240 分钟之间采集动脉血气样本。使用混合效应模型分析参数数据,时间点为固定因子,受试者为随机因子。我们发现,在 ASCI 前后的时间点上,心率、脉压、SpO₂、EtCO₂和呼吸频率没有变化。舒张压、平均动脉压和收缩压在 ASCI 后 2 分钟分别显著下降 18%、16%和 15%。然而,在任何时间点,动脉压的下降都没有导致低血压。ASCI 后心率没有明显变化。血糖在 ASCI 后 120 至 240 分钟之间逐渐升高至基线以上 50%。低位胸段 ASCI 导致动脉压一致且具有统计学意义但临床意义较小的超急性下降(-15%),但不会导致低血压或代谢变化提示组织低灌注。我们使用该模型的研究结果表明,为了避免 ASCI 后出现低血压状态,在脊柱创伤前应将平均动脉压维持在 85mmHg 以上。