Intracanal Pressure in Compressive Spinal Cord Injury: Reduction with Hypothermia

被引:22
|
作者
Batchelor, Peter E. [1 ]
Kerr, Nicole F. [1 ]
Gatt, Amy M. [1 ]
Cox, Susan F. [1 ]
Ghasem-Zadeh, Ali [2 ]
Wills, Taryn E. [1 ]
Sidon, Tara K. [1 ]
Howells, David W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Stroke Res Inst, Dept Med, Heidelberg, Vic, Australia
[2] Natl Stroke Res Inst, Endocrinol Ctr Excellence, Heidelberg, Vic, Australia
关键词
decompression; hypothermia; intracanal pressure; neuroprotection; spinal cord injury; SEVERE HEAD-INJURY; HOSPITAL CARDIAC-ARREST; TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY; 4-DEGREES-C NORMAL SALINE; INTRACRANIAL-PRESSURE; CERVICAL-SPINE; POSTTRAUMATIC HYPOTHERMIA; THERAPEUTIC HYPOTHERMIA; COMATOSE SURVIVORS; CRANICAL PRESSURE;
D O I
10.1089/neu.2010.1622
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Most cases of human spinal cord injury (SCI) are accompanied by continuing cord compression. Experimentally, compression results in rapid neurological decline over hours, suggesting a rise in intracanal pressure local to the site of injury. The aim of this study was to measure the rise in local intracanal pressure accompanying progressive canal occlusion and to determine the relationship between raised intracanal pressure and neurological outcome. We also aimed to establish whether hypothermia was able to reduce raised intracanal pressure. We demonstrate that, following SCI in F344 rats, local intracanal pressure remains near normal until canal occlusion exceeds 30% of diameter, whereupon a rapid increase in pressure occurs. Intracanal pressure appears to be an important determinant of neurological recovery, with poor long-term behavioural and histological outcomes in animals subject to 8 h of 45% canal occlusion, in which intracanal pressure is significantly elevated. In contrast, good neurological recovery occurs in animals with near normal intracanal pressure (animals undergoing 8 h of 30% canal occlusion or those undergoing immediate decompression). We further demonstrate that hypothermia is an effective therapy to control raised intracanal pressure, rapidly reducing elevated intracanal pressure accompanying critical (45%) canal occlusion to near normal. Overall these data indicate that following SCI only limited canal narrowing is tolerated before local intracanal pressure rapidly rises, inducing a sharp decline in neurological outcome. Raised intracanal pressure can be controlled with hypothermia, which may be a useful therapy to emergently decompress the spinal cord prior to surgical decompression.
引用
收藏
页码:809 / 820
页数:12
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