Shaffner D H, Eleff S M, Koehler R C, Traystman R J
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Md, USA.
Stroke. 1998 Dec;29(12):2607-15. doi: 10.1161/01.str.29.12.2607.
We sought (1) to determine the effect of brief periods of no flow on the subsequent forebrain blood flow during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and (2) to test the hypothesis that hypothermia prevents the impact of the no-flow duration on cerebral blood flow (CBF) during CPR.
No-flow intervals of 1.5, 3, and 6 minutes before CPR at brain temperatures of 28 degreesC and 38 degreesC were compared in 6 groups of anesthetized dogs. Microsphere-determined CBF and metabolism were measured before and during vest CPR adjusted to maintain cerebral perfusion pressure at 25 mm Hg.
Increasing the no-flow interval from 1.5 to 6 minutes at 38 degreesC decreased the CBF (18. 6+/-3.6 to 6.1+/-1.7 mL/100 g per minute) and the cerebral metabolic rate (2.1+/-0.3 to 0.7+/-0.2 mL/100 g per minute) during CPR. Cooling to 28 degreesC before and during the arrest eliminated the detrimental effects of increasing the no-flow interval on CBF (16. 8+/-1.0 to 14.8+/-1.9 mL/100 g per minute) and cerebral metabolic rate (1.1+/-0.1 to 1.3+/-0.1 mL/100 g per minute). Unlike the forebrain, 6 minutes of preceding cardiac arrest did not affect brain stem blood flow during CPR.
Increasing the no-flow interval to 6 minutes in normothermic animals decreases the supratentorial blood flow and cerebral metabolic rate during CPR at a cerebral perfusion pressure of 25 mm Hg. Cooling to 28 degreesC eliminates the detrimental impact of the 6-minute no-flow interval on the reflow produced during CPR. The brain-protective effects of hypothermia include improving reflow during CPR after cardiac arrest. The effect of hypothermia and the impact of short durations of no flow on reperfusion indicate that increasing viscosity and reflex vasoconstriction are unlikely causes of the "no-reflow" phenomenon.
我们旨在(1)确定心肺复苏(CPR)期间短时间无血流对随后前脑血流的影响,以及(2)检验低温可预防CPR期间无血流持续时间对脑血流(CBF)影响的假设。
在6组麻醉犬中,比较脑温为28℃和38℃时CPR前1.5、3和6分钟的无血流间隔。在调整体外CPR以维持脑灌注压为25mmHg之前和期间,测量微球测定的CBF和代谢。
在38℃时,将无血流间隔从1.5分钟增加到6分钟会降低CPR期间的CBF(从每分钟18.6±3.6降至6.1±1.7ml/100g)和脑代谢率(从每分钟2.1±0.3降至0.7±0.2ml/100g)。在心脏停搏前和期间冷却至28℃消除了增加无血流间隔对CBF(从每分钟16.8±1.0升至14.8±1.9ml/100g)和脑代谢率(从每分钟1.1±0.1升至1.3±0.1ml/100g)的有害影响。与前脑不同,之前6分钟的心脏停搏在CPR期间不影响脑干血流。
在常温动物中将无血流间隔增加到6分钟会降低CPR期间脑灌注压为25mmHg时幕上血流和脑代谢率。冷却至28℃消除了6分钟无血流间隔对CPR期间再灌注的有害影响。低温的脑保护作用包括改善心脏停搏后CPR期间的再灌注。低温的作用以及短时间无血流对再灌注的影响表明,粘度增加和反射性血管收缩不太可能是“无再流”现象的原因。