体温过低的神经保护

A.J. Gunn , M. Thoresen
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引用次数: 176

摘要

在出生时窒息或成人心脏骤停复苏期间或之后的低温可能会减少不断发展的损害,这一可能性一直困扰着临床医生。现在已经知道,严重的缺氧缺血不一定会立即导致细胞死亡,但会引发复杂的生化级联反应,导致延迟的神经元损失。在临床和实验中,损伤的关键阶段包括再灌注后的潜伏期,初步恢复脑组织能量代谢,但脑电图受到抑制,其次是在损伤后6至15小时开始的以细胞毒素积累、癫痫发作、细胞毒性水肿和脑氧化代谢衰竭为特征的次级阶段。虽然许多次生过程可能是有害的,但它们似乎主要是细胞死亡“执行”阶段的副现象。围绕这一概念框架设计的研究表明,中度脑低温在继发性恶化发生之前尽早开始,并持续足够的时间(与脑损伤的严重程度相关),在成年和围产期物种中都与有效、持久的神经保护有关。两项大型对照试验,一项是头部冷却并轻度低温,另一项是全身适度冷却,表明复苏后冷却在重症监护中通常是安全的,并可减少新生儿脑病后18个月时的死亡或残疾。然而,这些研究表明,似乎只有一小部分婴儿受益。未来的挑战是找到提高治疗效果的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hypothermic Neuroprotection

The possibility that hypothermia during or after resuscitation from asphyxia at birth, or cardiac arrest in adults, might reduce evolving damage has tantalized clinicians for a very long time. It is now known that severe hypoxia-ischemia may not necessarily cause immediate cell death, but can precipitate a complex biochemical cascade leading to the delayed neuronal loss. Clinically and experimentally, the key phases of injury include a latent phase after reperfusion, with initial recovery of cerebral energy metabolism but EEG suppression, followed by a secondary phase characterized by accumulation of cytotoxins, seizures, cytotoxic edema, and failure of cerebral oxidative metabolism starting 6 to 15 h post insult. Although many of the secondary processes can be injurious, they appear to be primarily epiphenomena of the ‘execution’ phase of cell death. Studies designed around this conceptual framework have shown that moderate cerebral hypothermia initiated as early as possible before the onset of secondary deterioration, and continued for a sufficient duration in relation to the severity of the cerebral injury, has been associated with potent, long-lasting neuroprotection in both adult and perinatal species. Two large controlled trials, one of head cooling with mild hypothermia, and one of moderate whole body cooling have demonstrated that post resuscitation cooling is generally safe in intensive care, and reduces death or disability at 18 months of age after neonatal encephalopathy. These studies, however, show that only a subset of babies seemed to benefit. The challenge for the future is to find ways of improving the effectiveness of treatment.

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