4.7 Article

A randomized, double-blind trial comparing the effect of two blood pressure targets on global brain metabolism after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest

Journal

CRITICAL CARE
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13054-023-04376-y

Keywords

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; Brain injury; Arterial pressure; Jugular bulb microdialysis; Cerebral metabolism

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This study aimed to assess the effect of different blood pressure levels on global cerebral metabolism in comatose patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The results showed that targeting a higher mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) did not significantly improve cerebral energy metabolism within 96 hours of post-resuscitation care. Patients with a poor clinical outcome exhibited significantly worse biochemical patterns, indicating that insufficient tissue oxygenation and recirculation during the initial hours after resuscitation were important factors determining neurological outcome.
PurposeThis study aimed to assess the effect of different blood pressure levels on global cerebral metabolism in comatose patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).MethodsIn a double-blinded trial, we randomly assigned 60 comatose patients following OHCA to low (63 mmHg) or high (77 mmHg) mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). The trial was a sub-study in the Blood Pressure and Oxygenation Targets after Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest-trial (BOX). Global cerebral metabolism utilizing jugular bulb microdialysis (JBM) and cerebral oxygenation (rSO(2)) was monitored continuously for 96 h. The lactate-to-pyruvate (LP) ratio is a marker of cellular redox status and increases during deficient oxygen delivery (ischemia, hypoxia) and mitochondrial dysfunction. The primary outcome was to compare time-averaged means of cerebral energy metabolites between MAP groups during post-resuscitation care. Secondary outcomes included metabolic patterns of cerebral ischemia, rSO(2), plasma neuron-specific enolase level at 48 h and neurological outcome at hospital discharge (cerebral performance category).ResultsWe found a clear separation in MAP between the groups (15 mmHg, p < 0.001). Cerebral biochemical variables were not significantly different between MAP groups (LPR low MAP 19 (16-31) vs. high MAP 23 (16-33), p = 0.64). However, the LP ratio remained high (> 16) in both groups during the first 30 h. During the first 24 h, cerebral lactate > 2.5 mM, pyruvate levels > 110 mu M, LP ratio > 30, and glycerol > 260 mu M were highly predictive for poor neurological outcome and death with AUC 0.80. The median (IQR) rSO(2) during the first 48 h was 69.5% (62.0-75.0%) in the low MAP group and 69.0% (61.3-75.5%) in the high MAP group, p = 0.16.ConclusionsAmong comatose patients resuscitated from OHCA, targeting a higher MAP 180 min after ROSC did not significantly improve cerebral energy metabolism within 96 h of post-resuscitation care. Patients with a poor clinical outcome exhibited significantly worse biochemical patterns, probably illustrating that insufficient tissue oxygenation and recirculation during the initial hours after ROSC were essential factors determining neurological outcome.

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