Moser Miriam M, Rössler Karl, Hirschmann Dorian, Gramss Leon, Plöchl Walter, Herta Johannes, Reinprecht Andrea, Zeitlinger Markus, Hosmann Arthur
Department of Neurosurgery, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Anesthesia, General Intensive Care Medicine and Pain Management, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2025 Oct;118(4):928-934. doi: 10.1002/cpt.3753. Epub 2025 Jun 24.
An unimpaired neurological evaluation is essential for detecting delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) in aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) patients. Nimodipine is currently the only drug approved for DCI prevention. Intravenous nimodipine infusion contains 23.7 vol% ethanol as an excipient, resulting in up to 45 g of ethanol being infused daily, which may interfere with neurological assessment. Therefore, we aimed to measure ethanol concentrations in plasma, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and brain parenchyma during the infusion of 0.5-2 mg of nimodipine per hour in aSAH patients to quantify the ethanol neuronal exposure. Ethanol concentrations were determined by headspace gas chromatography-flame ionization detection in plasma and CSF and we set out brain parenchyma measurement using cerebral microdialysis, in 10 aSAH patients. In each compartment four samples were taken over a 6-hour interval during steady-state intravenous nimodipine infusion at four different doses (0.5, 1, 1.5 and 2 mg/hour). A total of 307 samples from plasma and CSF was measured. Ethanol levels were mostly below the quantification limit of 0.002 g/100 mL. In 36 samples ethanol concentration was ≥ 0.002 g/100 mL, ranging from 0.002 to 0.009 g/100 mL. These low values were not reproducible in a second measurement, suggesting these values likely reflected analytical variability rather than true ethanol concentrations. Nimodipine analysis in brain parenchyma was omitted due to insufficient microdialysate volume and low concentrations in blood and CSF. Continuous nimodipine infusion of up to 2 mg/hour is unlikely to impair neurological assessment in aSAH patients, as no significant CSF ethanol concentration (< 0.002 g/100 mL) was detected.
对于检测动脉瘤性蛛网膜下腔出血(aSAH)患者的迟发性脑缺血(DCI),完整的神经学评估至关重要。尼莫地平是目前唯一被批准用于预防DCI的药物。静脉输注的尼莫地平含有23.7 vol%的乙醇作为辅料,导致每日输注的乙醇量高达45 g,这可能会干扰神经学评估。因此,我们旨在测量aSAH患者每小时输注0.5 - 2 mg尼莫地平时血浆、脑脊液(CSF)和脑实质中的乙醇浓度,以量化乙醇对神经元的暴露量。在10例aSAH患者中,采用顶空气相色谱 - 火焰离子化检测法测定血浆和CSF中的乙醇浓度,并使用脑微透析法进行脑实质测量。在稳态静脉输注四种不同剂量(0.5、1、1.5和2 mg/小时)的尼莫地平时,在每个腔室的6小时间隔内采集四个样本。共测量了307份血浆和CSF样本。乙醇水平大多低于0.002 g/100 mL的定量限。在36份样本中,乙醇浓度≥ 0.002 g/100 mL,范围为0.002至0.009 g/100 mL。这些低值在第二次测量中无法重现,表明这些值可能反映的是分析变异性而非真实的乙醇浓度。由于微透析液体积不足以及血液和CSF中浓度较低,未进行脑实质中的尼莫地平分析。高达2 mg/小时的尼莫地平持续输注不太可能损害aSAH患者的神经学评估,因为未检测到显著的CSF乙醇浓度(< 0.002 g/100 mL)。