A pilot study of cerebrovascular reactivity autoregulation after pediatric cardiac arrest

作者:Lee Jennifer K*; Brady Ken M; Chung Shang En; Jennings Jacky M; Whitaker Emmett E; Aganga Devon; Easley Ronald B; Heitmiller Kerry; Jamrogowicz Jessica L; Larson Abby C; Lee Jeong Hoo; Jordan Lori C; Hogue Charles W; Lehmann Christoph U; Bembea Mela M; Hunt Elizabeth A; Koehler Raymond C; Shaffner Donald H
来源:Resuscitation, 2014, 85(10): 1387-1393.
DOI:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2014.07.006

摘要

Aim: Improved survival after cardiac arrest has placed greater emphasis on neurologic resuscitation. The purpose of this pilot study was to evaluate the relationship between cerebrovascular autoregulation and neurologic outcomes after pediatric cardiac arrest. Methods: Children resuscitated from cardiac arrest had autoregulation monitoring during the first 72 h after return of circulation with an index derived from near-infrared spectroscopy in a pilot study. The range of mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) with optimal vasoreactivity (MAP(OPT)) was identified. The area under the curve (AUC) of the time spent with MAP below MAP(OPT) and MAP deviation below MAP(OPT) was calculated. Neurologic outcome measures included placement of a new tracheostomy or gastrostomy, death from a primary neurologic etiology (brain death or withdrawal of support for neurologic futility), and change in the Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score (Delta PCPC). Results: Thirty-six children were monitored. Among children who did not require extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), children who received a tracheostomy/gastrostomy had greater AUC during the second 24 h after resuscitation than those who did not (P = 0.04; n = 19). Children without ECMO who died from a neurologic etiology had greater AUC during the first 48 h than did those who lived or died from cardiovascular failure (P = 0.04; n = 19). AUC below MAPOPT was not associated with Delta PCPC when children with or without ECMO were analyzed separately. Conclusions: Deviation from the blood pressure with optimal autoregulatory vasoreactivity may predict poor neurologic outcomes after pediatric cardiac arrest. This experimental autoregulation monitoring technique may help individualize blood pressure management goals after resuscitation.

  • 出版日期2014-10