Kiening K L, Härtl R, Unterberg A W, Schneider G H, Bardt T, Lanksch W R
Virchow-Medical Center, Department of Neurosurgery, Humboldt-University of Berlin, Germany.
Neurol Res. 1997 Jun;19(3):233-40. doi: 10.1080/01616412.1997.11740805.
Monitoring of brain tissue partial pressure of O2 (ti-pO2) is a promising new technique that allows early detection of impending cerebral ischemia in brain-injured patients. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of standard therapeutic interventions used in the treatment of intracranial hypertension in comatose patients on cerebral oxygenation. In the neurosurgical intensive care unit ti-pO2, arterial blood pressure, intracranial pressure (ICP), cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) and jugular bulb oxygen saturation (SjvO2) were prospectively studied (0.1 Hz acquisition rate) in 23 comatose patients (21 with severe traumatic brain injury, 2 with intracerebral hematoma) during various treatment modalities: elevation of CPP with dopamine (n = 35), lowering of the head (n = 22), induced arterial hypocapnia (n = 13), mannitol infusion (n = 16), and decompressive craniotomy (n = 1). Ischemic episodes ('IE' = ti-pO2 < 10 mmHg for > 15 min) within the first week after the insult were always associated with unfavorable neurological outcome. Elevation of CPP from 32 +/- 2 to 67 +/- 4 mmHg significantly improved ti-pO2 by 62% (13 +/- 2 to 21 +/- 1 mmHg) and reduced ICP indicating intact cerebral autoregulation. Further raising CPP from 68 +/- 2 to 84 +/- 2 mmHg did not alter ti-pO2. Mannitol-induced ICP reduction from 23 +/- 1 to 16 +/- 2 mmHg did not affect ti-pO2, nor did lowering of the head from 30 degrees to 0 degree. Hyperventilation from an endtidal pCO2 of 29 +/- 3 to 21 +/- 3 mmHg normalized ICP and CPP, but significantly reduced ti-pO2 from 31 +/- 2 to 14 +/- 3 mmHg. Decompressive craniotomy in a 15-year old patient with refractory intracranial hypertension instantly restored ti-pO2. Based on the present data, our understanding of many interventions previously believed to improve brain oxygenation might have to be re-evaluated. A CPP > 60 mmHg emerges as the most important factor determining sufficient brain tissue pO2. Any intervention used to further elevate CPP does not improve ti-pO2, to the contrary, hyperventilation even bears the risk of inducing brain ischemia.
监测脑组织氧分压(ti-pO2)是一项很有前景的新技术,它能够早期发现脑损伤患者即将发生的脑缺血。本研究的目的是探讨昏迷患者颅内高压治疗中使用的标准治疗干预措施对脑氧合的影响。在神经外科重症监护病房,对23例昏迷患者(21例重度创伤性脑损伤,2例脑内血肿)在不同治疗方式下进行前瞻性研究(采集频率0.1Hz),包括用多巴胺提高脑灌注压(CPP)(n = 35)、头部低垂(n = 22)、诱导动脉低碳酸血症(n = 13)、输注甘露醇(n = 16)和减压开颅术(n = 1)。损伤后第一周内的缺血发作(“IE”= ti-pO2 < 10 mmHg持续> 15分钟)总是与不良神经结局相关。CPP从32±2 mmHg升高至67±4 mmHg可使ti-pO2显著改善62%(从13±2 mmHg升至21±1 mmHg),并降低颅内压,表明脑自动调节功能完好。将CPP进一步从68±2 mmHg升高至84±2 mmHg并未改变ti-pO2。甘露醇使颅内压从23±1 mmHg降至16±2 mmHg,并未影响ti-pO2,头部从30度低垂至0度也未影响ti-pO2。呼气末二氧化碳分压从29±3 mmHg过度通气至21±3 mmHg可使颅内压和CPP恢复正常,但显著降低ti-pO2,从31±2 mmHg降至14±3 mmHg。一名15岁难治性颅内高压患者行减压开颅术后ti-pO2立即恢复。基于目前的数据,我们对许多以前认为可改善脑氧合的干预措施的理解可能需要重新评估。CPP > 60 mmHg是决定足够脑组织氧分压的最重要因素。用于进一步提高CPP的任何干预措施均不能改善ti-pO2,相反,过度通气甚至有诱发脑缺血的风险。