Critical illness-associated cerebral microbleeds for patients with severe COVID-19: etiologic hypotheses

被引:42
|
作者
Lersy, Francois [1 ]
Willaume, Thibault [1 ]
Brisset, Jean-Christophe [2 ]
Collange, Olivier [3 ]
Helms, Julie [4 ,5 ]
Schneider, Francis [6 ]
Chammas, Agathe [1 ]
Willaume, Alexandre [7 ]
Meyer, Nicolas [8 ]
Anheim, Mathieu [9 ,10 ]
Cotton, Francois [11 ,12 ]
Kremer, Stephane [1 ,13 ]
机构
[1] Hop Hautepierre, Hop Univ Strasbourg, Serv Imagerie 2, 1 Ave Moliere, F-67200 Strasbourg, France
[2] Observ Francais Sclerose Plaques, Lyon, France
[3] Nouvel Hop Civil, Hop Univ Strasbourg, Serv Anesthesie Reanimat, Strasbourg, France
[4] Nouvel Hop Civil, Hop Univ Strasbourg, Serv Med Intens Reanimat, Strasbourg, France
[5] Univ Strasbourg UNISTRA, Immunorhumatol Mol, INSERM UMR S1109,Federat Hosp Univ FHU OMICARE,Fe, LabEx TRANSPLANTEX,Ctr Rech Immunol & Hematol,Fac, Strasbourg, France
[6] Hop Univ Strasbourg, Serv Med Intens Reanimat, Strasbourg, France
[7] Hop Claude Huriez, Dept Hematol, Lille Univ Hosp, Lille, France
[8] CHU Strasbourg, Serv Sante Publ, GMRC, F-67091 Strasbourg, France
[9] Hop Univ Strasbourg, Serv Neurol, Strasbourg, France
[10] INSERM U964 CNRS UMR7104 Univ Strasbourg, Inst Genet & Biol Mol & Cellulaire IGBMC, Illkirch Graffenstaden, France
[11] Hosp Civils Lyon, Ctr Hosp Lyon Sud, MRI Ctr, Lyon, France
[12] Univ Lyon 1, CREATIS LRMN, CNRS UMR 5220 INSERM U630, Villeurbanne, France
[13] Univ sStrasbourg CNRS, Engn Sci Comp Sci & Imaging Lab ICube, Integrat Multimodal Imaging Healthcare, UMR 7357, Strasbourg, France
关键词
COVID-19; Microhemorrhages; MRI; Hypoxemia; Kidney failure; EXTRACORPOREAL MEMBRANE-OXYGENATION; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1007/s00415-020-10313-8
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background and purpose During the COVID-19 outbreak, the presence of extensive white matter microhemorrhages was detected by brain MRIs. The goal of this study was to investigate the origin of this atypical hemorrhagic complication. Methods Between March 17 and May 18, 2020, 80 patients with severe COVID-19 infections were admitted for acute respiratory distress syndrome to intensive care units at the University Hospitals of Strasbourg for whom a brain MRI for neurologic manifestations was performed. 19 patients (24%) with diffuse microhemorrhages were compared to 18 control patients with COVID-19 and normal brain MRI. Results The first hypothesis was hypoxemia. The latter seemed very likely since respiratory failure was longer and more pronounced in patients with microhemorrhages (prolonged endotracheal intubation (p = 0.0002), higher FiO(2) (p = 0.03), increased use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (p = 0.04)). A relevant hypothesis, the role of microangiopathy, was also considered, since patients with microhemorrhages presented a higher increase of the D-Dimers (p = 0.01) and a tendency to more frequent thrombotic events (p = 0.12). Another hypothesis tested was the role of kidney failure, which was more severe in the group with diffuse microhemorrhages (higher creatinine level [median of 293 mu mol/L versus 112 mu mol/L, p = 0.04] and more dialysis were introduced in this group during ICU stay [12 versus 5 patients, p = 0.04]). Conclusions Blood-brain barrier dysfunction secondary to hypoxemia and high concentration of uremic toxins seems to be the main mechanism leading to critical illness-associated cerebral microbleeds, and this complication remains to be frequently described in severe COVID-19 patients.
引用
收藏
页码:2676 / 2684
页数:9
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