27 research outputs found

    AUTOREGULATION CEREBROVASCULAIRE SOUS ANESTHESIE GENERALE

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     En situation post-opĂ©ratoire, les complications de type accident vasculaire cĂ©rĂ©bral (AVC), dĂ©lires et confusions sont plus frĂ©quemment observĂ©es chez les personnes ĂągĂ©es que chez les jeunes. L'Ăąge a d'ailleurs Ă©tĂ© dĂ©fini comme un facteur de risque d'atteinte cognitive post-­‐opĂ©ratoire [14, 15]. Il a Ă©galement Ă©tĂ© montrĂ© que pour diverses raisons expliquĂ©es ci-­‐dessus, le mĂ©canisme d'AC Ă©tait perturbĂ© sous anesthĂ©sie gĂ©nĂ©rale par volatils [12]. Ainsi, l'AC Ă©tant moins fiable sous sĂ©dation, le DSC est moins constant et les variations de PPC peuvent ĂȘtre Ă  l'origine d'Ă©pisodes ischĂ©miques cliniquement silencieux. Il est alors lĂ©gitime de se demander si l'atteinte du systĂšme d'AC sous anesthĂ©sie gĂ©nĂ©rale par volatil ne serait pas en lien avec les complications post-­‐ opĂ©ratoires observĂ©es chez la personne ĂągĂ©e. L'objectif de l'Ă©tude est de dĂ©terminer le comportement du systĂšme d'AC et ses valeurs seuils sous anesthĂ©sie gĂ©nĂ©rale par volatil, chez la personne ĂągĂ©e comparativement au sujet jeune. Si une diffĂ©rence de seuil d'AC peut-­‐ĂȘtre mise en Ă©vidence entre les deux populations, il sera intĂ©ressant de voir si elle est applicable en clinique, ceci afin de prĂ©venir les complications post-­‐opĂ©ratoires. Peu de travaux ont Ă©tĂ© menĂ©s sur le lien entre le systĂšme d'AC et l'Ăąge, qui plus est sous sĂ©dation par volatil. Et pourtant, avec le vieillissement de la population, le nombre d'anesthĂ©sie gĂ©nĂ©rale chez des patients ĂągĂ©s est en constante augmentation. Les AVC, Ă  l'origine d'handicaps physiques et cognitifs majeurs, et leur prise en charge reprĂ©sentent un coĂ»t certain pour l'assurance maladie. Il devient donc de plus en plus urgent de comprendre le comportement du systĂšme d'AC chez la personne ĂągĂ©e sous anesthĂ©sie gĂ©nĂ©rale. Plus qu'un simple intĂ©rĂȘt scientifique, cette Ă©tude est directement appliquĂ©e Ă  la clinique et est pleinement d'actualitĂ©

    Non-Ischemic Cerebral Energy Dysfunction at the Early Brain Injury Phase following Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage.

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    The pathophysiology of early brain injury following aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is still not completely understood. Using brain perfusion CT (PCT) and cerebral microdialysis (CMD), we examined whether non-ischemic cerebral energy dysfunction may be a pathogenic determinant of EBI. A total of 21 PCTs were performed (a median of 41 h from ictus onset) among a cohort of 18 comatose mechanically ventilated SAH patients (mean age 58 years, median admission WFNS score 4) who underwent CMD and brain tissue PO2 (PbtO2) monitoring. Cerebral energy dysfunction was defined as CMD episodes with lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) >40 and/or lactate >4 mmol/L. PCT-derived global CBF was categorized as oligemic (CBF < 28 mL/100 g/min), normal (CBF 28-65 mL/100 g/min), or hyperemic (CBF 69-85 mL/100 g/min), and was matched to CMD/PbtO2 data. Global CBF (57 ± 14 mL/100 g/min) and PbtO2 (25 ± 9 mm Hg) were within normal ranges. Episodes with cerebral energy dysfunction (n = 103 h of CMD samples, average duration 7.4 h) were frequent (66% of CMD samples) and were associated with normal or hyperemic CBF. CMD abnormalities were more pronounced in conditions of hyperemic vs. normal CBF (LPR 54 ± 12 vs. 42 ± 7, glycerol 157 ± 76 vs. 95 ± 41 ”mol/L; both p < 0.01). Elevated brain LPR correlated with higher CBF (r = 0.47, p < 0.0001). Cerebral energy dysfunction is frequent at the early phase following poor-grade SAH and is associated with normal or hyperemic brain perfusion. Our data support the notion that mechanisms alternative to ischemia/hypoxia are implicated in the pathogenesis of early brain injury after SAH

    Improvement of Neuroenergetics by Hypertonic Lactate Therapy in Patients with Traumatic Brain Injury Is Dependent on Baseline Cerebral Lactate/Pyruvate Ratio.

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    Energy dysfunction is associated with worse prognosis after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Recent data suggest that hypertonic sodium lactate infusion (HL) improves energy metabolism after TBI. Here, we specifically examined whether the efficacy of HL (3h infusion, 30-40 Όmol/kg/min) in improving brain energetics (using cerebral microdialysis [CMD] glucose as a main therapeutic end-point) was dependent on baseline cerebral metabolic state (assessed by CMD lactate/pyruvate ratio [LPR]) and cerebral blood flow (CBF, measured with perfusion computed tomography [PCT]). Using a prospective cohort of 24 severe TBI patients, we found CMD glucose increase during HL was significant only in the subgroup of patients with elevated CMD LPR >25 (n = 13; +0.13 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.08-0.19] mmol/L, p < 0.001; vs. +0.04 [-0.05-0.13] in those with normal LPR, p = 0.33, mixed-effects model). In contrast, CMD glucose increase was independent from baseline CBF (coefficient +0.13 [0.04-0.21] mmol/L when global CBF was <32.5 mL/100 g/min vs. +0.09 [0.04-0.14] mmol/L at normal CBF, both p < 0.005) and systemic glucose. Our data suggest that improvement of brain energetics upon HL seems predominantly dependent on baseline cerebral metabolic state and support the concept that CMD LPR - rather than CBF - could be used as a diagnostic indication for systemic lactate supplementation following TBI

    Erratum to: 36th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine

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    [This corrects the article DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1208-6.]

    Cerebral Lactate Metabolism After Traumatic Brain Injury.

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    Cerebral energy dysfunction has emerged as an important determinant of prognosis following traumatic brain injury (TBI). A number of studies using cerebral microdialysis, positron emission tomography, and jugular bulb oximetry to explore cerebral metabolism in patients with TBI have demonstrated a critical decrease in the availability of the main energy substrate of brain cells (i.e., glucose). Energy dysfunction induces adaptations of cerebral metabolism that include the utilization of alternative energy resources that the brain constitutively has, such as lactate. Two decades of experimental and human investigations have convincingly shown that lactate stands as a major actor of cerebral metabolism. Glutamate-induced activation of glycolysis stimulates lactate production from glucose in astrocytes, with subsequent lactate transfer to neurons (astrocyte-neuron lactate shuttle). Lactate is not only used as an extra energy substrate but also acts as a signaling molecule and regulator of systemic and brain glucose use in the cerebral circulation. In animal models of brain injury (e.g., TBI, stroke), supplementation with exogenous lactate exerts significant neuroprotection. Here, we summarize the main clinical studies showing the pivotal role of lactate and cerebral lactate metabolism after TBI. We also review pilot interventional studies that examined exogenous lactate supplementation in patients with TBI and found hypertonic lactate infusions had several beneficial properties on the injured brain, including decrease of brain edema, improvement of neuroenergetics via a "cerebral glucose-sparing effect," and increase of cerebral blood flow. Hypertonic lactate represents a promising area of therapeutic investigation; however, larger studies are needed to further examine mechanisms of action and impact on outcome

    Efficacy of the SEPARPROCATHÂź radiation drape to reduce radiation exposure during cardiac catheterization: A pilot comparative study.

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    Interventional cardiologists are exposed to radiation-induced diseases, partly due to patient's scatter radiation. We sought to compare the radiation exposure (RE) of the cardiac catheterization room staff using SEPARPROCATHÂź, a novel radio-protective drape versus standard shielding equipment. This was a two-step prospective, randomized pilot trial: first, in experimental conditions using a phantom model, and second, during cardiac catheterization. Primary end-point was operator RE corresponding to the ratio between operator cumulative dose (CD) and dose area product (DAP). Secondary end-points were nurse RE, operator and nurse CD, DAP, and fluoroscopy time. A total of 51 patients were included. SEPARPROCATHÂź was associated with a lower operator RE (0.07 [0-0.19] vs. 0.37 [0.23-0.81] ÎŒSv/Gy.cm <sup>2</sup> without SEPARPROCATHÂź, p value <0.0001) and lower nurse RE (0 [0-0.05] vs. 0.13 [0.03-0.28] ÎŒSv/Gy.cm <sup>2</sup> , p value <0.0001) corresponding to an RE relative risk reduction of 81% and 99%, respectively. Similar reductions were observed for operator and nurse CDs. No difference was found in DAP (19 [11-29] vs. 14 [10-32] Gy.cm <sup>2</sup> without SEPARPROCATHÂź, p value 0.81). SEPARPROCATHÂź offers significant additional radioprotection to the operator and nurse during cardiac catheterization without affecting patient safety

    Neuroenergetic Response to Prolonged Cerebral Glucose Depletion after Severe Brain Injury and the Role of Lactate.

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    Lactate may represent a supplemental fuel for the brain. We examined cerebral lactate metabolism during prolonged brain glucose depletion (GD) in acute brain injury (ABI) patients monitored with cerebral microdialysis (CMD). Sixty episodes of GD (defined as spontaneous decreases of CMD glucose from normal to low [<1.0 mmol/L] for at least 2 h) were identified among 26 patients. During GD, we found a significant increase of CMD lactate (from 4±2.3 to 5.4±2.9 mmol/L), pyruvate (126.9±65.1 to 172.3±74.1 Όmol/L), and lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR; 27±6 to 35±9; all, p<0.005), while brain oxygen and blood lactate remained normal. Dynamics of lactate and glucose supply during GD were further studied by analyzing the relationships between blood and CMD samples. There was a strong correlation between blood and brain lactate when LPR was normal (r=0.56; p<0.0001), while an inverse correlation (r=-0.11; p=0.04) was observed at elevated LPR >25. The correlation between blood and brain glucose also decreased from r=0.62 to r=0.45. These findings in ABI patients suggest increased cerebral lactate delivery in the absence of brain hypoxia when glucose availability is limited and support the concept that lactate acts as alternative fuel

    Hypertonic Lactate to Improve Cerebral Perfusion and Glucose Availability After Acute Brain Injury.

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    Lactate promotes cerebral blood flow and is an efficient substrate for the brain, particularly at times of glucose shortage. Hypertonic lactate is neuroprotective after experimental brain injury; however, human data are limited. Prospective study (clinicaltrials.gov NCT01573507). Academic ICU. Twenty-three brain-injured subjects (13 traumatic brain injury/10 subarachnoid hemorrhage; median age, 59 yr [41-65 yr]; median Glasgow Coma Scale, 6 [3-7]). Three-hour IV infusion of hypertonic lactate (sodium lactate, 1,000 mmol/L; concentration, 30 ”mol/kg/min) administered 39 hours (26-49 hr) from injury. We examined the effect of hypertonic lactate on cerebral perfusion (using transcranial Doppler) and brain energy metabolism (using cerebral microdialysis). The majority of subjects (13/23 = 57%) had reduced brain glucose availability (baseline pretreatment cerebral microdialysis glucose, < 1 mmol/L) despite normal baseline intracranial pressure (10 [7-15] mm Hg). Hypertonic lactate was associated with increased cerebral microdialysis lactate (+55% [31-80%]) that was paralleled by an increase in middle cerebral artery mean cerebral blood flow velocities (+36% [21-66%]) and a decrease in pulsatility index (-21% [13-26%]; all p < 0.001). Cerebral microdialysis glucose increased above normal range during hypertonic lactate (+42% [30-78%]; p < 0.05); reduced brain glucose availability correlated with a greater improvement of cerebral microdialysis glucose (Spearman r = -0.53; p = 0.009). No significant changes in cerebral perfusion pressure, mean arterial pressure, systemic carbon dioxide, and blood glucose were observed during hypertonic lactate (all p > 0.1). This is the first clinical demonstration that hypertonic lactate resuscitation improves both cerebral perfusion and brain glucose availability after brain injury. These cerebral vascular and metabolic effects appeared related to brain lactate supplementation rather than to systemic effects

    Bedside cerebral microdialysis monitoring of delayed cerebral hypoperfusion in comatose patients with poor grade aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage.

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    Delayed cerebral ischaemia (DCI) is frequent after poor grade aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). Owing to the limited accuracy of clinical examination, DCI diagnosis is often based on multimodal monitoring. We examined the value of cerebral microdialysis (CMD) in this setting. 20 comatose SAH participants underwent CMD monitoring-for hourly sampling of cerebral extracellular lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) and glucose-and brain perfusion CT (PCT). Patients were categorised as DCI when PCT (8±3 days after SAH) showed cerebral hypoperfusion, defined as cerebral blood flow <32.5 mL/100 g/min with a mean transit time >5.7 s. Clinicians were blinded to CMD data; for the purpose of the study, only patients who developed cerebral hypoperfusion in anterior and/or middle cerebral arteries were analysed. DCI (n=9/20 patients) was associated with higher CMD LPR (51±36 vs 31±10 in patients without DCI, p=0.0007) and lower CMD glucose (0.64±0.34 vs 1.22±1.05, p=0.0005). In patients with DCI, CMD changes over the 18 hours preceding PCT diagnosis revealed a pattern of CMD LPR increase (coefficient +2.96 (95% CI 0.13 to 5.79), p=0.04) with simultaneous CMD glucose decrease (coefficient -0.06 (95% CI -0.08 to -0.01), p=0.03, mixed-effects multilevel regression model). No significant CMD changes were noted in patients without DCI. In comatose patients with SAH, delayed cerebral hypoperfusion correlates with a CMD pattern of lactate increase and simultaneous glucose decrease. CMD abnormalities became apparent in the hours preceding PCT, thereby suggesting that CMD monitoring may anticipate targeted therapeutic interventions
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