Browsing by Author "Regueira Heskia, Tomás"
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- ItemAn evidence-based resuscitation algorithm applied from the emergency room to the ICU improves survival of severe septic shock(2008) Castro López, Ricardo; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Aguirre Zúniga, Marcia Lorena; Llanos Valdés, Osvaldo Pablo; Bruhn, Alejandro; Bugedo Tarraza, Guillermo; Dougnac Labatut, Alberto; Castillo Fuenzalida, Luis Benito; Andresen Hernández, Max; Hernández P., GlennBackground. Septic shock is highly lethal. We recently implemented an algorithm (advanced resuscitation algorithm for septic shock, ARAS 1) with a global survival of 67%, but with a very high mortality (72%) in severe cases [norepinephrine (NE) requirements >0.3 µg/kg/min for mean arterial pressure ≥70 mmHg]. As new therapies with different levels of evidence were proposed [steroids, drotrecogin alpha, high-volume hemofiltration (HVHF)], we incorporated them according to severity (NE requirements; algorithm ARAS-2), and constructed a multidisciplinary team to manage these patients from the emergency room (ER) to the ICU. The aim of this study was to compare the outcome of severe septic shock patients under both protocols. Methods. Adult patients with severe septic shock were enrolled consecutively and managed prospectively with ARAS1 (1999-2001), and ARAS-2 (2002-05). ARAS-2 incorporates HVHF for intractable shock. Results. Thirty-three patients were managed with each protocol, without statistical differences in baseline demographics, APACHE II (22.2 vs 23.8), SOFA (11.4 vs 12.7) and NE peak levels (0.62 vs 0.8 µg/kg/min). The 28-day mortality and epinephrine use were higher with ARAS-1 (72.7% vs 48.5%; 87.9% vs 18.2 %); and low-dose steroids (35.9% vs 72.7%), drotrecogin (0 vs 15 %) and HVHF use (3.0% vs 39.4%) were higher for ARAS-2 (P<0.05 for all). Conclusion. Management of severe septic shock with a multidisciplinary team and an updated protocol (according to the best current evidence), with precise entry criteria for every intervention at different stages of severity, may improve survival in these patients. Multidisciplinary management, rationalization of the use of vasoactives and rescue therapy based on HVHF instead of epinephrine may have contributed to these results. Management of severe septic shock with these kinds of algorithms is feasible and should be encouraged.
- ItemCatastrophic respiratory failure from tuberculosis pneumonia: Survival after prolonged extracorporeal membrane oxygenation support(2013) Andresen Hernández, Max; Tapia, P.; Mercado, M.; Bugedo Tarraza, Guillermo; Bravo, S.; Regueira Heskia, TomásTuberculosis (TB) is an uncommon cause of severe respiratory failure, even in highly endemic regions. Mortality in cases requiring mechanical ventilation (MV) varies between 60 and 90%. The use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is not frequently needed in TB. We report the case of a 24 year old woman diagnosed with bilateral pneumonia that required MV and intensive care, patient was managed with prone ventilation for 48 h, but persisted in refractory hypoxemia. Etiological study was only positive for mycobacterium tuberculosis. As a rescue therapy arterio-venous extracorporeal CO2 removal was started and lased for 4 days, but fails to support the patient due to greater impairment of oxygenation. Veno-venous ECMO was then initiated, thus normalizes gas exchanged and allows lungs to rest. ECMO was maintained for 36 days, with two episodes of serious complication treated successfully. Given the absence of clinical improvement and the lack of nosocomial infection, at 42-day of ICU stay methylprednisolone 250 mg daily for 4 days was started, since secondary organizing pneumonia associated with TB was suspected. Thereafter progressive improvement in pulmonary mechanics and reduction of pulmonary opacities was observed, allowing the final withdrawal of ECMO. Percutaneous tracheostomy was performed and the patient remained connected until her transfer to her base hospital at day 59 of admission to our unit. The tracheostomy was removed prior to hospital discharge, and the patient is today at home. Prolonged ECMO support is a useful and potentially successful tool in catastrophic respiratory failure caused by TB.
- ItemDe novo expression of functional connexins 43 and 45 hemichannels increases sarcolemmal permeability of skeletal myofibers during endotoxemia(2019) Cea, L.A.; Balboa Castillo, Elisa Ivana; Vargas Ríos, Aníbal Antonio; Puebla, C.; Branes, M.C.; Escamilla, R.; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Sáez, Juan Carlos
- ItemDeterminantes precoces en el desarrollo de injuria renal aguda durante la sepsis abdominal experimental(2014) Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Andresen Hernández, Max; Mercado Flores, Marcelo Esteban; Lillo, F.; Soto, D.
- ItemDexamethasone-induced muscular atrophy is mediated by functional expression of connexin-based hemichannels(2016) Cea, L.; Balboa Castillo, Elisa Ivana; Puebla, C.; Vargas, A.; Cisterna Irrazabal, Bruno Alejandro; Escamilla, R.; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Sáez, Juan Carlos
- ItemDisfunción mitocondrial en sepsis, impacto y posible papel regulador del factor inducible por hipoxia (HIF-1?)(2009) Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Andresen Hernández, Max; Djafarzadeh, S.
- ItemEarly and severe impairment of lactate clearance in endotoxic shock is not related to liver hypoperfusion: preliminary report(2014) Tapia, Pablo; Soto, Dagoberto; Bruhn, Alejandro; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Jarufe Cassis, Nicolás; Alegría, Leyla; Bachler, J. P.; Leon, F.; Vicuña, C.; Hernández P., Glenn
- ItemEffects of dobutamine on systemic, regional and microcirculatory perfusion parameters in septic shock: a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover study(2013) Hernández P., Glenn; Bruhn, Alejandro; Luengo Messen, Cecilia; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Kattan Tala, Eduardo José; Fuentealba, Andrea; Florez, Jorge; Castro López, Ricardo; Aquevedo Salazar, Andrés Fernando; Pairumani, Ronald; Mc-Nab Martin, Paul Andrew; Ince, Can
- ItemGastric tonometry versus cardiac index as resuscitation goals in septic shock: a multicenter, randomized, controlled trial(2009) Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Bruhn, Alejandro; Hernández P., Glenn; Palizas, Fernando; Dubin, Arnaldo; Knobel, Elias; Lazzeri, Silvio; Baredes, NatalioAbstract Introduction Resuscitation goals for septic shock remain controversial. Despite the normalization of systemic hemodynamic variables, tissue hypoperfusion can still persist. Indeed, lactate or oxygen venous saturation may be difficult to interpret. Our hypothesis was that a gastric intramucosal pH-guided resuscitation protocol might improve the outcome of septic shock compared with a standard approach aimed at normalizing systemic parameters such as cardiac index (CI). Methods The 130 septic-shock patients were randomized to two different resuscitation goals: CI ≥ 3.0 L/min/m2 (CI group: 66 patients) or intramucosal pH (pHi) ≥ 7.32 (pHi group: 64 patients). After correcting basic physiologic parameters, additional resuscitation consisting of more fluids and dobutamine was started if specific goals for each group had not been reached. Several clinical data were registered at baseline and during evolution. Hemodynamic data and pHi values were registered every 6 hours during the protocol. Primary end point was 28 days' mortality. Results Both groups were comparable at baseline. The most frequent sources of infection were abdominal sepsis and pneumonia. Twenty-eight day mortality (30.3 vs. 28.1%), peak Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System scores (32.6 ± 6.5 vs. 33.2 ± 4.7) and ICU length of stay (12.6 ± 8.2 vs. 16 ± 12.4 days) were comparable. A higher proportion of patients exhibited values below the specific target at baseline in the pHi group compared with the CI group (50% vs. 10.9%; P < 0.001). Of 32 patients with a pHi < 7.32 at baseline, only 7 (22%) normalized this parameter after resuscitation. Areas under the receiver operator characteristic curves to predict mortality at baseline, and at 24 and 48 hours were 0.55, 0.61, and 0.47, and 0.70, 0.90, and 0.75, for CI and pHi, respectively. Conclusions Our study failed to demonstrate any survival benefit of using pHi compared with CI as resuscitation goal in septic-shock patients. Nevertheless, a normalization of pHi within 24 hours of resuscitation is a strong signal of therapeutic success, and in contrast, a persistent low pHi despite treatment is associated with a very bad prognosis in septic-shock patients.Abstract Introduction Resuscitation goals for septic shock remain controversial. Despite the normalization of systemic hemodynamic variables, tissue hypoperfusion can still persist. Indeed, lactate or oxygen venous saturation may be difficult to interpret. Our hypothesis was that a gastric intramucosal pH-guided resuscitation protocol might improve the outcome of septic shock compared with a standard approach aimed at normalizing systemic parameters such as cardiac index (CI). Methods The 130 septic-shock patients were randomized to two different resuscitation goals: CI ≥ 3.0 L/min/m2 (CI group: 66 patients) or intramucosal pH (pHi) ≥ 7.32 (pHi group: 64 patients). After correcting basic physiologic parameters, additional resuscitation consisting of more fluids and dobutamine was started if specific goals for each group had not been reached. Several clinical data were registered at baseline and during evolution. Hemodynamic data and pHi values were registered every 6 hours during the protocol. Primary end point was 28 days' mortality. Results Both groups were comparable at baseline. The most frequent sources of infection were abdominal sepsis and pneumonia. Twenty-eight day mortality (30.3 vs. 28.1%), peak Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System scores (32.6 ± 6.5 vs. 33.2 ± 4.7) and ICU length of stay (12.6 ± 8.2 vs. 16 ± 12.4 days) were comparable. A higher proportion of patients exhibited values below the specific target at baseline in the pHi group compared with the CI group (50% vs. 10.9%; P < 0.001). Of 32 patients with a pHi < 7.32 at baseline, only 7 (22%) normalized this parameter after resuscitation. Areas under the receiver operator characteristic curves to predict mortality at baseline, and at 24 and 48 hours were 0.55, 0.61, and 0.47, and 0.70, 0.90, and 0.75, for CI and pHi, respectively. Conclusions Our study failed to demonstrate any survival benefit of using pHi compared with CI as resuscitation goal in septic-shock patients. Nevertheless, a normalization of pHi within 24 hours of resuscitation is a strong signal of therapeutic success, and in contrast, a persistent low pHi despite treatment is associated with a very bad prognosis in septic-shock patients.Abstract Introduction Resuscitation goals for septic shock remain controversial. Despite the normalization of systemic hemodynamic variables, tissue hypoperfusion can still persist. Indeed, lactate or oxygen venous saturation may be difficult to interpret. Our hypothesis was that a gastric intramucosal pH-guided resuscitation protocol might improve the outcome of septic shock compared with a standard approach aimed at normalizing systemic parameters such as cardiac index (CI). Methods The 130 septic-shock patients were randomized to two different resuscitation goals: CI ≥ 3.0 L/min/m2 (CI group: 66 patients) or intramucosal pH (pHi) ≥ 7.32 (pHi group: 64 patients). After correcting basic physiologic parameters, additional resuscitation consisting of more fluids and dobutamine was started if specific goals for each group had not been reached. Several clinical data were registered at baseline and during evolution. Hemodynamic data and pHi values were registered every 6 hours during the protocol. Primary end point was 28 days' mortality. Results Both groups were comparable at baseline. The most frequent sources of infection were abdominal sepsis and pneumonia. Twenty-eight day mortality (30.3 vs. 28.1%), peak Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System scores (32.6 ± 6.5 vs. 33.2 ± 4.7) and ICU length of stay (12.6 ± 8.2 vs. 16 ± 12.4 days) were comparable. A higher proportion of patients exhibited values below the specific target at baseline in the pHi group compared with the CI group (50% vs. 10.9%; P < 0.001). Of 32 patients with a pHi < 7.32 at baseline, only 7 (22%) normalized this parameter after resuscitation. Areas under the receiver operator characteristic curves to predict mortality at baseline, and at 24 and 48 hours were 0.55, 0.61, and 0.47, and 0.70, 0.90, and 0.75, for CI and pHi, respectively. Conclusions Our study failed to demonstrate any survival benefit of using pHi compared with CI as resuscitation goal in septic-shock patients. Nevertheless, a normalization of pHi within 24 hours of resuscitation is a strong signal of therapeutic success, and in contrast, a persistent low pHi despite treatment is associated with a very bad prognosis in septic-shock patients.
- ItemImpairment of exogenous lactate clearance in experimental hyperdynamic septic shock is not related to total liver hypoperfusion(2014) Tapia Ossa, Pablo José; Soto, Dagoberto; Bruhn, Alejandro; Alegría, Leyla; Jarufe Cassis, Nicolás; Kattan Tala, Eduardo José; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Meissner, Arturo; Menchaca, Rodrigo; Vives, María IgnaciaIntroduction: Although the prognostic value of persistent hyperlactatemia in septic shock is unequivocal, its physiological determinants are controversial. Particularly, the role of impaired hepatic clearance has been underestimated and is only considered relevant in patients with liver ischemia or cirrhosis. Our objectives were to establish whether endotoxemia impairs whole body net lactate clearance, and to explore a potential role for total liver hypoperfusion during the early phase of septic shock.Methods: After anesthesia, 12 sheep were subjected to hemodynamic/perfusion monitoring including hepatic and portal catheterization, and a hepatic ultrasound flow probe. After stabilization (point A), sheep were alternatively assigned to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (5 mcg/kg bolus followed by 4 mcg/kg/h) or sham for a three-hour study period. After 60 minutes of shock, animals were fluid resuscitated to normalize mean arterial pressure. Repeated series of measurements were performed immediately after fluid resuscitation (point B), and one (point C) and two hours later (point D). Monitoring included systemic and regional hemodynamics, blood gases and lactate measurements, and ex-vivo hepatic mitochondrial respiration at point D. Parallel exogenous lactate and sorbitol clearances were performed at points B and D. Both groups included an intravenous bolus followed by serial blood sampling to draw a curve using the least squares method.Results: Significant hyperlactatemia was already present in LPS as compared to sham animals at point B (4.7 (3.1 to 6.7) versus 1.8 (1.5 to 3.7) mmol/L), increasing to 10.2 (7.8 to 12.3) mmol/L at point D. A significant increase in portal and hepatic lactate levels in LPS animals was also observed. No within-group difference in hepatic DO2, VO2 or O2 extraction, total hepatic blood flow (point D: 915 (773 to 1,046) versus 655 (593 to 1,175) ml/min), mitochondrial respiration, liver enzymes or sorbitol clearance was found. However, there was a highly significant decrease in lactate clearance in LPS animals (point B: 46 (30 to 180) versus 1,212 (743 to 2,116) ml/min, P <0.01; point D: 113 (65 to 322) versus 944 (363 to 1,235) ml/min, P <0.01).Conclusions: Endotoxemia induces an early and severe impairment in lactate clearance that is not related to total liver hypoperfusion.
- ItemLipoperoxidation and protein oxidative damage exhibit different kinetics during septic shock(HINDAWI LTD, 2008) Andresen Hernández, Max; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Bruhn, Alejandro; Pérez Pons, Druso Diego; Strobel Lobos, Pablo Alberto; Dougnac Labatut, Alberto; Marshall Rivera, Guillermo; Leighton Puga, Federico
- ItemPersistent sepsis-induced hypotension without hyperlactatemia: A distinct clinical and physiological profile within the spectrum of septic shock(2012) Hernández P., Glenn; Bruhn, Alejandro; Castro, R.; Pedreros, C.; Rovegno Echavarria, Maxiliano; Kattan Tala, Eduardo José; Veas, E.; Fuentealba, A.; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Ruiz, C.; Ince, C.Introduction. A subgroup of septic shock patients will never develop hyperlactatemia despite being subjected to a massive circulatory stress. Maintenance of normal lactate levels during septic shock is of great clinical and physiological interest. Our aim was to describe the clinical, hemodynamic, perfusion, and microcirculatory profiles associated to the absence of hyperlactatemia during septic shock resuscitation. Methods. We conducted an observational study in septic shock patients undergoing resuscitation. Serial clinical, hemodynamic, and perfusion parameters were registered. A single sublingual microcirculatory assessment was performed in a subgroup. Patients evolving with versus without hyperlactatemia were compared. Results. 124 septic shock patients were included. Patients without hyperlactatemia exhibited lower severity scores and mortality. They also presented higher platelet counts and required less intensive treatment. Microcirculation was assessed in 45 patients. Patients without hyperlactatemia presented higher PPV and MFI values. Lactate was correlated to several microcirculatory parameters. No difference in systemic flow parameters was observed. Conclusion. Persistent sepsis-induced hypotension without hyperlactatemia is associated with less organ dysfunctions and a very low mortality risk. Patients without hyperlactatemia exhibit less coagulation and microcirculatory derangements despite comparable macrohemodynamics. Our study supports the notion that persistent sepsis-induced hypotension without hyperlactatemia exhibits a distinctive clinical and physiological profile.
- ItemPopulation pharmacokinetics and dose simulation of vancomycin in critically ill patients during high-volume haemofiltration(2014) Escobar, Leslie; Andresen Hernández, Max; Downey Concha, Patricio; Nella Gai, María; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Bórquez, Tamara; Lipman, Jeffrey; Roberts, Jason A.
- ItemPositive end-expiratory pressure increases strain in patients with ALI/ARDS(2011) Bugedo Tarraza, Guillermo; Bruhn, Alejandro; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Romero, C.; Retamal, J.; Hernández P., GlennThe study aimed to evaluate a methodology to quantify the porosity of the soil using computed tomography in areas under no-tillage, conventional tillage and native forest. Three soil management systems were selected for the study: forest, conventional tillage and no-tillage. In each soil management system, undisturbed soil samples were collected in the surface layer (0.0 to 0.10 m). The tomographic images were obtained using a X-ray microtomography. After obtaining the images, they were processed, and a methodology was evaluated for image conversion into numerical values. The statistical method which provided the greatest accuracy was the percentile method. The methodology used to analyze the tomographic image allowed quantifying the porosity of the soil under different soil management. The method enabled the characterization of soil porosity in a non-evasive and non-destructive way.
- ItemPro- and anti-inflammatory balance of septic patients is associated with severity and outcome(2007) Dougnac Labatut, Alberto; Castro López, Ricardo; Riquelme, Arnoldo; Calvo, M.; Eugenin, E.; Arellano, M.; Pattillo, A.; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Mercado Flores, Marcelo Esteban; Andresen Hernández, Max AlfonsoPurpose: To study infl ammatory profi le in patients with sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock with regards to organ dysfunction and outcome, and to identify a pattern associated with more catastrophic course of illness, organ failure and risk of death. Material and methods: Twenty-nine consecutive patients with sepsis admitted to a medical Intensive Care Unit of a tertiary university hospital (November 2002-December 2003). Plasmatic levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interleukin-10 (IL10) as pro-infl ammatory and anti-infl ammatory markers were measured at baseline, 12, 24 and 48 hours of evolution. Results: There is a positive association between higher levels of IL-6 and severity of the septic process, organ dysfunctions and risk of death, statistically signifi cant at anytime (at baseline, 12, 24 and 48 hours, p <0.05). Higher IL-6/IL-10 ratios associate signifi cantly with risk of death at 24 hours (RR=1.45 if higher or equal to the median). Conclusions: Plasmatic biomarkers measurement during the initial phase of sepsis may help to individualize therapy. An evaluation at 24 h based on IL-6/IL-10 ratio may anticipate a more aggressive infl ammatory profi le. These patients would specially benefi t from immunomodulating therapies to improve survival.
- ItemRecomendaciones de la Sociedad Chilena de Medicina Intensiva para la prevención de tromboembolismo venoso en pacientes críticos médico-quirúrgicos adultos(2016) Figueroa, Gastón; Labarca, Eduardo; Cornejo, Rodrigo; Ruiz, Carolina; Sánchez, Juan Eduardo; Castro López, Ricardo; Huerta, Gustavo; Pedreros, César; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Romero, Carlos
- ItemRelationship of systemic, hepatosplanchnic, and microcirculatory perfusion parameters with 6-hour lactate clearance in hyperdynamic septic shock patients: an acute, clinical-physiological, pilot study(2012) Hernández P., Glenn; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Bruhn, Alejandro; Castro López, Ricardo; Rovegno Echavarria, Maxiliano; Fuentealba, Andrea; Veas, Enrique; Florez, Jorge; Kattan Tala, Eduardo José; Martin, Celeste; Ince, Can; Berrutti, DoloresAbstract Background Recent clinical studies have confirmed the strong prognostic value of persistent hyperlactatemia and delayed lactate clearance in septic shock. Several potential hypoxic and nonhypoxic mechanisms have been associated with persistent hyperlactatemia, but the relative contribution of these factors has not been specifically addressed in comprehensive clinical physiological studies. Our goal was to determine potential hemodynamic and perfusion-related parameters associated with 6-hour lactate clearance in a cohort of hyperdynamic, hyperlactatemic, septic shock patients. Methods We conducted an acute clinical physiological pilot study that included 15 hyperdynamic, septic shock patients undergoing aggressive early resuscitation. Several hemodynamic and perfusion-related parameters were measured immediately after preload optimization and 6 hours thereafter, with 6-hour lactate clearance as the main outcome criterion. Evaluated parameters included cardiac index, mixed venous oxygen saturation, capillary refill time and central-to-peripheral temperature difference, thenar tissue oxygen saturation (StO2) and its recovery slope after a vascular occlusion test, sublingual microcirculatory assessment, gastric tonometry (pCO2 gap), and plasma disappearance rate of indocyanine green (ICG-PDR). Statistical analysis included Wilcoxon and Mann–Whitney tests. Results Five patients presented a 6-hour lactate clearance <10%. Compared with 10 patients with a 6-hour lactate clearance ≥10%, they presented a worse hepatosplanchnic perfusion as represented by significantly more severe derangements of ICG-PDR (9.7 (8–19) vs. 19.6 (9–32)%/min, p < 0.05) and pCO2 gap (33 (9.1-62) vs. 7.7 (3–58) mmHg, p < 0.05) at 6 hours. No other systemic, hemodynamic, metabolic, peripheral, or microcirculatory parameters differentiated these subgroups. We also found a significant correlation between ICG-PDR and pCO2 gap (p = 0.02). Conclusions Impaired 6-hour lactate clearance could be associated with hepatosplanchnic hypoperfusion in some hyperdynamic septic shock patients. Improvement of systemic, metabolic, and peripheral perfusion parameters does not rule out the persistence of hepatosplanchnic hypoperfusion in this setting. Severe microcirculatory abnormalities can be detected in hyperdynamic septic shock patients, but their role on lactate clearance is unclear. ICG-PDR may be a useful tool to evaluate hepatosplanchnic perfusion in septic shock patients with persistent hyperlactatemia. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01271153
- ItemSepsis-Induced Channelopathy in Skeletal Muscles is Associated with Expression of Non-Selective Channels(2018) Balboa Castillo, Elisa Ivana; Saavedra Leiva, Fujiko; Cea, Luis A.; Vargas, Aníbal, A.; Ramírez, Valeria; Escamilla, Rosalba; Sáez, Juan Carlos; Regueira Heskia, Tomás
- ItemThe holistic view on perfusion monitoring in septic shock(2012) Hernández P., Glenn; Bruhn, Alejandro; Castro, Ricardo; Regueira Heskia, TomásPurpose of review: To review recent evidence concerning the interactions between hemodynamic and perfusion parameters during septic shock resuscitation, and to propose some basic foundations for a more comprehensive perfusion assessment. Recent findings: Several recent studies have expanded our knowledge about the physiologic determinants and limitations of currently used perfusion parameters such as central venous oxygen saturation and lactate. Macrohemodynamic, metabolic, peripheral and microcirculatory parameters tend to change in parallel in response to fluid loading during initial resuscitation. In contrast, perfusion markers are poorly correlated in patients who evolve with a persistent circulatory dysfunction. Therefore, assessment of perfusion status based solely on a single parameter can lead to inaccurate or misleading conclusions. Summary: All individual perfusion parameters have extensive limitations to adequately reflect tissue perfusion during persistent sepsis-related circulatory dysfunction. A multimodal approach integrating macrohemodynamic, metabolic, peripheral and eventually microcirculatory perfusion parameters may overcome those limitations. This approach may also provide a thorough understanding on the predominant driving forces of hypoperfusion, and lead to physiologically oriented interventions.
- ItemTherapeutic hypothermia for acute brain injuries(2015) Andresen Hernández, Max; Gazmuri, José T.; Marín, Arnaldo; Regueira Heskia, Tomás; Rovegno Echavarria, MaxilianoAbstract Therapeutic hypothermia, recently termed target temperature management (TTM), is the cornerstone of neuroprotective strategy. Dating to the pioneer works of Fay, nearly 75 years of basic and clinical evidence support its therapeutic value. Although hypothermia decreases the metabolic rate to restore the supply and demand of O2, it has other tissue-specific effects, such as decreasing excitotoxicity, limiting inflammation, preventing ATP depletion, reducing free radical production and also intracellular calcium overload to avoid apoptosis. Currently, mild hypothermia (33°C) has become a standard in post-resuscitative care and perinatal asphyxia. However, evidence indicates that hypothermia could be useful in neurologic injuries, such as stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage and traumatic brain injury. In this review, we discuss the basic and clinical evidence supporting the use of TTM in critical care for acute brain injury that extends beyond care after cardiac arrest, such as for ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and traumatic brain injury. We review the historical perspectives of TTM, provide an overview of the techniques and protocols and the pathophysiologic consequences of hypothermia. In addition, we include our experience of managing patients with acute brain injuries treated using endovascular hypothermia.