Az agyi perfuziós nyomás emelése dopaminnal - ellentmondásos hatások a súlyos koponyasérülés kezelésében [Increasing cerebral perfusion pressure in serious cranial injury--contradictory effects of dopamine]

BACKGROUND: Management of cerebral perfusion pressure is an important element of the treatment of traumatic brain injury. Vasopressors are accepted as a method of choice to increase mean arterial blood pressure and thus cerebral perfusion pressure in the face of rising intracranial pressure. There a...

Teljes leírás

Elmentve itt :
Bibliográfiai részletek
Szerzők: Barzó Pál
Czigner Andrea
Marmarou Anthony
Beaumont Andrew
Deák Gábor
Fatouros Panos
Corwin Frank
Dokumentumtípus: Cikk
Megjelent: 2005
Sorozat:IDEGGYOGYASZATI SZEMLE / CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE 58 No. 7-8
Tárgyszavak:
mtmt:1316697
Online Access:http://publicatio.bibl.u-szeged.hu/30775
LEADER 03242nab a2200277 i 4500
001 publ30775
005 20241018133822.0
008 241018s2005 hu o 000 hun d
022 |a 0019-1442 
024 7 |a 1316697  |2 mtmt 
040 |a SZTE Publicatio Repozitórium  |b hun 
041 |a hun 
100 1 |a Barzó Pál 
245 1 3 |a Az agyi perfuziós nyomás emelése dopaminnal - ellentmondásos hatások a súlyos koponyasérülés kezelésében [Increasing cerebral perfusion pressure in serious cranial injury--contradictory effects of dopamine]  |h [elektronikus dokumentum] /  |c  Barzó Pál 
260 |c 2005 
300 |a 233-244 
490 0 |a IDEGGYOGYASZATI SZEMLE / CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE  |v 58 No. 7-8 
520 3 |a BACKGROUND: Management of cerebral perfusion pressure is an important element of the treatment of traumatic brain injury. Vasopressors are accepted as a method of choice to increase mean arterial blood pressure and thus cerebral perfusion pressure in the face of rising intracranial pressure. There are, however, some unresolved issues and potential risks to this therapy. MATERIAL AND METHODS: This study therefore examines the effects of dopamine on physiological changes as well as on brain edema and water content that can be readily assessed by MRI/MRS in (1) a rodent model of rapidly rising intracranial pressure, caused by diffuse injury with secondary insult and (2) a model of cortical contusion. RESULTS: Dopamine was capable of restoring cerebral perfusion pressure in the model of rapidly rising intracranial pressure. However, this was associated with only a partial restoration of cerebral blood flow. In the brain tissue two profiles of change in the apparent diffusion coefficient of water (ADCw) were seen; one in which ADCw recovered to baseline, and one in which ADCw remained persistently low. Despite that dopamine did not alter these profiles, MRI-assessed tissue water content was increased four hours after injury and dopamine increased cerebral water content in both subgroups of injury, especially in the subgroup with a persistently low ADCw (p < 0.01). In the contusion group dopamine significantly worsened the edema both in the injured and in the contralateral area of hippocampus and temporal cortex even though the ADCw values did not change, except for the contralateral hippocampus, where both water content and ADC, values rose with treatment, suggesting extracellular accumulation of water. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that dopamine has a double effect--while it temporarily and partially restores cerebral blood perfusion, at the same time it induces an increase in brain swelling and thus an increase in intracranial pressure in some cases. It is possible that in a subgroup of patients vasopressor treatment leads to an opposite effect several hours later. Vasopressor therapy in the clinical setting therefore should be cautiously applied. 
650 4 |a Általános orvostudomány 
700 0 1 |a Czigner Andrea  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Marmarou Anthony  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Beaumont Andrew  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Deák Gábor  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Fatouros Panos  |e aut 
700 0 1 |a Corwin Frank  |e aut 
856 4 0 |u http://publicatio.bibl.u-szeged.hu/30775/1/aok_klny_400_05.pdf  |z Dokumentum-elérés