Hypothermia for 24 hours after asphyxic cardiac arrest in piglets provides striatal neuroprotection that is sustained 10 days after rewarming.
Publication/Presentation Date
8-1-2003
Abstract
The neuroprotective effect of hypothermia instituted after resuscitation from asphyxic cardiac arrest has not been studied in immature brain, particularly in a large animal model with recovery periods greater than 4 d. Moreover, protection from severe hypoxia seen with 3 h of hypothermia was reported to be lost when hypothermic duration was extended to 24 h in unsedated piglets, in contrast to the neuroprotection reported by 72 h of intrauterine head cooling in fetal sheep. Piglets (5-7 postnatal days) were subjected to asphyxic cardiac arrest followed by 24 h of either hypothermia (34 degrees C) or normothermia (38.5-39 degrees C). Comparisons were made with normothermic and hypothermic surgical sham animals without asphyxia. All of these groups were sedated, paralyzed, and mechanically ventilated for the first 24 h to prevent shivering and possible depletion of glucose stores. Hypothermia per se did not cause remarkable structural abnormalities. Ischemic damage was evaluated in putamen at 1 d of recovery without rewarming and at 11 d (10 d +/- SD after rewarming). Ischemic cytopathology affected 60 +/- 12% of neurons in putamen of normothermic animals compared with 9 +/- 6% in hypothermic animals at 1 d of recovery without rewarming. At 11 d of recovery from hypoxia-ischemia, the density of viable neurons (neuron profiles/mm2) in putamen was markedly reduced in normothermic animals (81 +/- 40) compared with hypothermic animals (287 +/- 22), which was the same as in sham normothermic (271 +/- 21), sham hypothermic (288 +/- 46) and naïve animals (307 +/- 51). These data demonstrate that 24 h of hypothermia at 34 degrees C with sedation and muscle relaxation after asphyxic cardiac arrest prevents necrotic striatal neuronal cell death in immature brain before rewarming, and that the effect is sustained at 11 d after injury without deleterious side effects.
Volume
54
Issue
2
First Page
253
Last Page
262
ISSN
0031-3998
Published In/Presented At
Agnew, D. M., Koehler, R. C., Guerguerian, A. M., Shaffner, D. H., Traystman, R. J., Martin, L. J., & Ichord, R. N. (2003). Hypothermia for 24 hours after asphyxic cardiac arrest in piglets provides striatal neuroprotection that is sustained 10 days after rewarming. Pediatric research, 54(2), 253–262. https://doi.org/10.1203/01.PDR.0000072783.22373.FF
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
12736390
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article