Cerebrovascular reactivity is not associated with therapeutic intensity in adult traumatic brain injury: a CENTER-TBI analysis
Authors
Ercole, Ari
Beqiri, Erta
Cabeleira, Manuel
Aries, Marcel
Zoerle, Tommaso
Carbonara, Marco
Stocchetti, Nino
Smielewski, Peter
Czosnyka, Marek
Menon, David K.
Anke, Audny
Beer, Ronny
Bellander, Bo-Michael
Buki, Andras
Chevallard, Giorgio
Chieregato, Arturo
Citerio, Giuseppe
Czeiter, Endre
Depreitere, Bart
Eapen, George
Frisvold, Shirin
Helbok, Raimund
Jankowski, Stefan
Kondziella, Daniel
Koskinen, Lars-Owe
Meyfroidt, Geert
Moeller, Kirsten
Nelson, David
Piippo-Karjalainen, Anna
Radoi, Andreea
Ragauskas, Arminas
Raj, Rahul
Rhodes, Jonathan
Rocka, Saulius
Rossaint, Rolf
Sahuquillo, Juan
Sakowitz, Oliver
Stevanovic, Ana
Sundström, Nina
Takala, Riikka
Tamosuitis, Tomas
Tenovuo, Olli
Vajkoczy, Peter
Vargiolu, Alessia
Vilcinis, Rimantas
Wolf, Stefan
Younsi, Alexander
Publication Date
2019-06-25Journal Title
Acta Neurochirurgica
ISSN
0001-6268
Publisher
Springer Vienna
Volume
161
Issue
9
Pages
1955-1964
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Zeiler, F. A., Ercole, A., Beqiri, E., Cabeleira, M., Aries, M., Zoerle, T., Carbonara, M., et al. (2019). Cerebrovascular reactivity is not associated with therapeutic intensity in adult traumatic brain injury: a CENTER-TBI analysis. Acta Neurochirurgica, 161 (9), 1955-1964. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-019-03980-8
Abstract
Abstract: Background: Impaired cerebrovascular reactivity in adult traumatic brain injury (TBI) is known to be associated with poor outcome. However, there has yet to be an analysis of the association between the comprehensively assessed intracranial hypertension therapeutic intensity level (TIL) and cerebrovascular reactivity. Methods: Using the Collaborative European Neuro Trauma Effectiveness Research in TBI (CENTER-TBI) high-resolution intensive care unit (ICU) cohort, we derived pressure reactivity index (PRx) as the moving correlation coefficient between slow-wave in ICP and mean arterial pressure, updated every minute. Mean daily PRx, and daily % time above PRx of 0 were calculated for the first 7 days of injury and ICU stay. This data was linked with the daily TIL-Intermediate scores, including total and individual treatment sub-scores. Daily mean PRx variable values were compared for each TIL treatment score via mean, standard deviation, and the Mann U test (Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons). General fixed effects and mixed effects models for total TIL versus PRx were created to display the relation between TIL and cerebrovascular reactivity. Results: A total of 249 patients with 1230 ICU days of high frequency physiology matched with daily TIL, were assessed. Total TIL was unrelated to daily PRx. Most TIL sub-scores failed to display a significant relationship with the PRx variables. Mild hyperventilation (p < 0.0001), mild hypothermia (p = 0.0001), high levels of sedation for ICP control (p = 0.0001), and use vasopressors for CPP management (p < 0.0001) were found to be associated with only a modest decrease in mean daily PRx or % time with PRx above 0. Conclusions: Cerebrovascular reactivity remains relatively independent of intracranial hypertension therapeutic intensity, suggesting inadequacy of current TBI therapies in modulating impaired autoregulation. These findings support the need for investigation into the molecular mechanisms involved, or individualized physiologic targets (ICP, CPP, or Co2) in order to treat dysautoregulation actively.
Keywords
Original Article - Brain trauma, Brain trauma, Cerebrovascular reactivity, PRx, TBI, Therapeutic intensity, TIL
Identifiers
s00701-019-03980-8, 3980
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-019-03980-8
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/307182
Rights
Licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/