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The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest

AIMS: Evaluate cerebral autoregulation (CAR) by intracranial pressure reactivity index (PRx) and cerebral blood flow reactivity index (CBFx) during the first four hours following return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in a porcine model of pediatric cardiac arrest. Determine whether impaired CAR i...

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Autores principales: Kirschen, Matthew P, Morgan, Ryan W., Majmudar, Tanmay, Landis, William P., Ko, Tiffany, Balu, Ramani, Balasubramanian, Sriram, Topjian, Alexis, Sutton, Robert M., Berg, Robert A., Kilbaugh, Todd J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8244245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34223325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resplu.2020.100051
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author Kirschen, Matthew P
Morgan, Ryan W.
Majmudar, Tanmay
Landis, William P.
Ko, Tiffany
Balu, Ramani
Balasubramanian, Sriram
Topjian, Alexis
Sutton, Robert M.
Berg, Robert A.
Kilbaugh, Todd J.
author_facet Kirschen, Matthew P
Morgan, Ryan W.
Majmudar, Tanmay
Landis, William P.
Ko, Tiffany
Balu, Ramani
Balasubramanian, Sriram
Topjian, Alexis
Sutton, Robert M.
Berg, Robert A.
Kilbaugh, Todd J.
author_sort Kirschen, Matthew P
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Evaluate cerebral autoregulation (CAR) by intracranial pressure reactivity index (PRx) and cerebral blood flow reactivity index (CBFx) during the first four hours following return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in a porcine model of pediatric cardiac arrest. Determine whether impaired CAR is associated with neurologic outcome. METHODS: Four-week-old swine underwent seven minutes of asphyxia followed by ventricular fibrillation induction and hemodynamic-directed CPR. Those achieving ROSC had arterial blood pressure, intracranial pressure (ICP), and microvascular cerebral blood flow (CBF) monitored for 4 h. Animals were assigned an 8 -h post-ROSC swine cerebral performance category score (1 = normal; 2–4=abnormal neurologic function). In this secondary analytic study, we calculated PRx and CBFx using a continuous, moving correlation coefficient between mean arterial pressure (MAP) and ICP, and between MAP and CBF, respectively. Burden of impaired CAR was the area under the PRx or CBFx curve using a threshold of 0.3 and normalized as percentage of monitoring duration. RESULTS: Among 23 animals, median PRx was 0.14 [0.06,0.25] and CBFx was 0.36 [0.05,0.44]. Median burden of impaired CAR was 21% [18,27] with PRx and 30% [17,40] with CBFx. Neurologically abnormal animals (n = 10) did not differ from normal animals (n = 13) in post-ROSC MAP (63 vs. 61 mmHg, p = 0.74), ICP (15 vs. 14 mmHg, p = 0.78) or CBF (274 vs. 397 Perfusion Units, p = 0.12). CBFx burden was greater among abnormal than normal animals (45% vs. 24%, p = 0.001), but PRx burden was not (25% vs. 20%, p = 0.38). CONCLUSION: CAR is impaired early after ROSC. A greater burden of CAR impairment measured by CBFx was associated with abnormal neurologic outcome. CHOP Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee protocol 19-001327.
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spelling pubmed-82442452021-07-02 The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest Kirschen, Matthew P Morgan, Ryan W. Majmudar, Tanmay Landis, William P. Ko, Tiffany Balu, Ramani Balasubramanian, Sriram Topjian, Alexis Sutton, Robert M. Berg, Robert A. Kilbaugh, Todd J. Resusc Plus Experimental Paper AIMS: Evaluate cerebral autoregulation (CAR) by intracranial pressure reactivity index (PRx) and cerebral blood flow reactivity index (CBFx) during the first four hours following return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in a porcine model of pediatric cardiac arrest. Determine whether impaired CAR is associated with neurologic outcome. METHODS: Four-week-old swine underwent seven minutes of asphyxia followed by ventricular fibrillation induction and hemodynamic-directed CPR. Those achieving ROSC had arterial blood pressure, intracranial pressure (ICP), and microvascular cerebral blood flow (CBF) monitored for 4 h. Animals were assigned an 8 -h post-ROSC swine cerebral performance category score (1 = normal; 2–4=abnormal neurologic function). In this secondary analytic study, we calculated PRx and CBFx using a continuous, moving correlation coefficient between mean arterial pressure (MAP) and ICP, and between MAP and CBF, respectively. Burden of impaired CAR was the area under the PRx or CBFx curve using a threshold of 0.3 and normalized as percentage of monitoring duration. RESULTS: Among 23 animals, median PRx was 0.14 [0.06,0.25] and CBFx was 0.36 [0.05,0.44]. Median burden of impaired CAR was 21% [18,27] with PRx and 30% [17,40] with CBFx. Neurologically abnormal animals (n = 10) did not differ from normal animals (n = 13) in post-ROSC MAP (63 vs. 61 mmHg, p = 0.74), ICP (15 vs. 14 mmHg, p = 0.78) or CBF (274 vs. 397 Perfusion Units, p = 0.12). CBFx burden was greater among abnormal than normal animals (45% vs. 24%, p = 0.001), but PRx burden was not (25% vs. 20%, p = 0.38). CONCLUSION: CAR is impaired early after ROSC. A greater burden of CAR impairment measured by CBFx was associated with abnormal neurologic outcome. CHOP Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee protocol 19-001327. Elsevier 2020-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8244245/ /pubmed/34223325 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resplu.2020.100051 Text en © 2020 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Experimental Paper
Kirschen, Matthew P
Morgan, Ryan W.
Majmudar, Tanmay
Landis, William P.
Ko, Tiffany
Balu, Ramani
Balasubramanian, Sriram
Topjian, Alexis
Sutton, Robert M.
Berg, Robert A.
Kilbaugh, Todd J.
The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
title The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
title_full The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
title_fullStr The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
title_full_unstemmed The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
title_short The association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
title_sort association between early impairment in cerebral autoregulation and outcome in a pediatric swine model of cardiac arrest
topic Experimental Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8244245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34223325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resplu.2020.100051
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