4.5 Article

Dynamic Thermal Mapping of Localized Therapeutic Hypothermia in the Brain

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2019.6485

Keywords

brain; MRS; selective cooling; temperature mapping; therapeutic hypothermia

Funding

  1. NSF [STTR 0923928]
  2. NIH [R01 EB023366, R01 EB011968, R01 CA140102, P30 NS052519, T32 GM007205]

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Although whole body cooling is used widely to provide therapeutic hypothermia for the brain, there are undesirable clinical side effects. Selective brain cooling may allow for rapid and controllable neuroprotection while mitigating these undesirable side effects. We evaluated an innovative cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cooling platform that utilizes chilled saline pumped through surgically implanted intraventricular catheters to induce hypothermia. Magnetic resonance thermal imaging of the healthy sheep brain (n = 4) at 7.0T provided dynamic temperature measurements from the whole brain. Global brain temperature was 38.5 +/- 0.8 degrees C at baseline (body temperature of 39.2 +/- 0.4 degrees C), and decreased by 3.1 +/- 0.3 degrees C over similar to 30 min of cooling (p < 0.0001). Significant cooling was achieved in all defined regions across both the ipsilateral and contralateral hemispheres relative to catheter placement. On cooling cessation, global brain temperature increased by 3.1 +/- 0.2 degrees C over similar to 20 min (p < 0.0001). Rapid and synchronized temperature fall/rise on cooling onset/offset was observed reproducibly with rates ranging from 0.06-0.21 degrees C/min, where rewarming was faster than cooling (p < 0.0001) signifying the importance of thermoregulation in the brain. Although core regions (including the subcortex, midbrain, olfactory tract, temporal lobe, occipital lobe, and parahippocampal cortex) had slightly warmer (similar to 0.2 degrees C) baseline temperatures, after cooling, temperatures reached the same level as the non-core regions (35.6 +/- 0.2 degrees C), indicating the cooling effectiveness of the CSF-based cooling device. In summary, CSF-based intraventricular cooling reliably reduces temperature in all identified brain regions to levels known to be neuroprotective, while maintaining overall systemic normothermia. Dynamic thermal mapping provides high spatiotemporal temperature measurements that can aid in optimizing selective neuroprotective protocols.

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