首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Cerebral resuscitation from cardiac arrestPathophysiologic mechanisms
Cerebral resuscitation from cardiac arrestPathophysiologic mechanisms

 

作者: Per MD Vaagenes,   Myron MD Ginsberg,   Uwe MD Ebmeyer,   Lars PhD Ernster,   Matthias MD Fischer,   Sven-Erik MD Gisvold,   Alexander MD Gurvitch,   Konstantin A. MD Hossmann,   Edwin M. PhD Nemoto,   Ann DVM Radovsky,   John W. MD Severinghaus,   Peter MD Safar,   Robert MD Schlichtig,   Fritz MD Sterz,   Tor MD Tonnessen,   Robert J. MD White,   Feng MD Xiao,   Yuan MD Zhou,  

 

期刊: Critical Care Medicine  (OVID Available online 1996)
卷期: Volume 24, issue 2  

页码: 57-68

 

ISSN:0090-3493

 

年代: 1996

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Both the period of total circulatory arrest to the brain and postischemic-anoxic encephalopathy (cerebral postresuscitation syndrome or disease), after normothermic cardiac arrests of between 5 and 20 mins (no-flow), contribute to complex physiologic and chemical derangements. The best documented derangements include the delayed protracted inhomogeneous cerebral hypoperfusion (despite controlled normotension), excitotoxicity as an explanation for selectively vulnerable brain regions and neurons, and free radical-triggered chemical cascades to lipid peroxidation of membranes. Protracted hypoxemia without cardiac arrest (e.g., very high altitude) can cause angiogenesis; the trigger of it, which lyses basement membranes, might be a factor in post-cardiac arrest encephalopathy. Questions to be explored include: What are the changes and effects on outcome of neurotransmitters (other than glutamate), of catecholamines, of vascular changes (microinfarcts seen after asphyxia), osmotic gradients, free-radical reactions, DNA cleavage, and transient extracerebral organ malfunction?For future mechanism-oriented studies of the brain after cardiac arrest and innovative cardiopulmonary-cerebral resuscitation, increasingly reproducible outcome models of temporary global brain ischemia in rats and dogs are now available. Disagreements exist between experienced investigative groups on the most informative method for quantitative evaluation of morphologic brain damage. There is agreement on the desirability of using not only functional deficit and chemical changes, but also morphologic damage as end points.(Crit Care Med 1996; 24(Suppl):S57-S68)

 



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