Department of Neurology, University Hospital Geelong, Geelong, Australia.
Intensive Care Unit, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
Ther Hypothermia Temp Manag. 2023 Jun;13(2):77-85. doi: 10.1089/ther.2022.0046. Epub 2023 Feb 13.
Cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) usually results in severe, long-term disability. Early therapeutic hypothermia (33-34°C) has been used to improve outcomes in preclinical studies, but previous clinical studies have commenced cooling after arrival at hospital. The objective of the study is to determine the feasibility and safety of early therapeutic hypothermia initiated by paramedics and maintained for up to 24 hours in hospital in patients with SCI. This is a pilot clinical study. The study was undertaken at Ambulance Victoria and The Alfred Hospital, Victoria, Australia. A total of 17 consecutive patients with suspected acute traumatic cervical SCI were enrolled. Patients with suspected cervical SCI were administered a bolus (up to 20 mL/kg) intravenous (IV) cold (4°C) normal saline in the prehospital phase of care. After hospital admission and spinal imaging, further cooling used IV catheter temperature control or surface cooling. Major complications and long-term outcomes were compared with historical controls admitted to the same center before the study. A decrease in core temperature of 1.1°C was achieved during prehospital care and the target temperature was achieved in 6 hours with mechanical temperature management devices in the hospital. There were no major safety concerns. Patients with motor complete SCI who underwent early decompressive surgery had a favorable rate of partial spinal cord recovery compared with historical controls. Therapeutic hypothermia induced using bolus, large-volume, ice-cold saline prehospital and maintained for 24 hours using mechanical devices appears to be feasible and safe in patients with SCI. Larger trials need to be undertaken to determine whether prehospital cooling combined with early decompressive surgery improves outcomes in patients with complete cervical SCI. Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12616001086459).
脊髓损伤(SCI)通常导致严重的长期残疾。在临床前研究中,早期治疗性低温(33-34°C)已被用于改善结果,但以前的临床研究是在到达医院后才开始降温。本研究旨在确定在脊髓损伤患者中,由护理人员启动并在医院内维持长达 24 小时的早期治疗性低温的可行性和安全性。这是一项试点临床研究。该研究在澳大利亚维多利亚州的救护车维多利亚和阿尔弗雷德医院进行。共纳入了 17 名连续的疑似急性创伤性颈段 SCI 患者。在院前护理阶段,疑似颈段 SCI 患者给予静脉(IV)冷(4°C)生理盐水推注(最多 20ml/kg)。在医院入院和脊柱成像后,使用 IV 导管温度控制或表面冷却进一步降温。主要并发症和长期结果与研究前同一中心收治的历史对照进行比较。在院前护理期间核心体温下降 1.1°C,在医院使用机械体温管理装置 6 小时内达到目标温度。没有出现重大安全问题。接受早期减压手术的运动完全 SCI 患者与历史对照相比,部分脊髓恢复的良好率较高。使用大剂量、冰冷盐水进行院前推注诱导的治疗性低温,并使用机械装置维持 24 小时,似乎在 SCI 患者中是可行且安全的。需要进行更大规模的试验,以确定院前降温联合早期减压手术是否能改善完全颈段 SCI 患者的结局。澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册(ACTRN12616001086459)。