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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the management of severe pediatric brain injury, attention has previously been paid to brain edema, ICP elevation and low cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). However, in the acute stage within 3-6 hours after trauma, brain hypoxia and hyperglycemia associated with diffuse brain injury are often observed. We have pointed out brain thermo-pooling (elevation of brain tissue temperature) and brain hypoxia caused by defective release of oxygen from hemoglobin (due to decrease in red blood cell enzyme (DPG)) as a new mechanism of brain injury. To treat these pathologic changes, we have developed a brain
hypothermia
treatment, the major purpose of which is to prevent brain hypoxia, brain thermo-pooling, neurohormonal changes causing cytokine
encephalopathy
, and a selective, radical-mediated damage of the dopamine A10 nervous system. The brain tissue temperature is initially adjusted to 35 degrees C with adequate cerebral oxygenation, followed by brain
hypothermia
at 34 degrees C for 1 weeks to prevent brain hypoxia, free radical reactions, brain edema and ICP elevation. What is most difficult in the pediatric brain
hypothermia
treatment is to maintain metabolic balance in the injured brain tissue and pulmonary infections associated with an immune crisis. When a rapid elevation of serum glucose is noted it is critical to lower the value because glucose quickly penetrates the blood-brain barrier and increases pyruvate and lactate by inhibiting the TCA cycle metabolism. Thus, hyperglycemia during brain
hypothermia
treatment is one of the major target of management. Another problem is immune crisis associated with secondary pulmonary infections. To prevent them, early enteral nutrition and replacement of L-arginine were most useful, as well as preconditioning for rewarming as follows: serum albumin > 3.0 g/dl; lymphocyte > 1500/mm3; T-H (CD4) lymphocytes > 55%; serum glucose, 120-140 mg/dl; vitamin A > 50 mg/dl; Hb > 12 g/dl and 2,3 DPG, 10-15 mumol/gHb; O2 ER, 23-25% and AT-III, > 100%. The clinical benefit of this therapy is still controversial.
...
PMID:[Brain hypothermia treatment for the management of severe pediatric brain injury]. 1072 86
Encephalitis/
encephalopathy
is a neurological syndrome characterized by acute onset, symptoms of intracranial hypertension accompanying severe sequels or death. Encephalitis is caused by microbial infection of central nervous system, such as neurotrophic or conventional viruses. Infectious
encephalopathy
shows similar clinical symptoms to acute encephalitis, without any evidence of inflammation and microbial infection in brain tissues. The national epidemiological surveillance of the diseases is carried out to study the frequency and prognosis of patients with both diseases. The principal treatment is quite different in the both, in the former the eradication of microbial from the brain and in the latter the reduction of pressure of brain edema. Furthermore, the improvement of the brain with severe destruction requires such new step to reduce the activities of enzymes or cytokines to destroy brain tissues, as a mild
hypothermia
to lower body and brain temperature to 33-34 degrees C.
...
PMID:[Current topics of acute encephalitis and encephalopathy: introductory remarks]. 1072 88
CT/MRI findings, laboratory examinations and prognoses of 42 patients with acute
encephalopathy
(AE) (Japan Coma Scale > or = 200) were reported. 1. Findings on CT/MRI were divided into the following 7 categories: Group 1 (normal), Group 2 (CT/MRI looked normal in acute phase, but brain atrophy developed and progressed slowly by weeks or months), Group 3 (CT/MRI looked normal within a few days after the onset of AE, but cortical laminar necrosis developed at 4-5 days after the onset), Group 4 (marked brain edema developed within 2 days after the onset of AE), Group 5 (AE with symmetric thalamic lesions), Group 6 (symmetric pallidum, lesions on MRI which appeared after brain edema disappeared), and Group 7 (the brain shrinked during acute phase, which normalized on the follow up CT/MRI). 2. Serum AST elevated in approximately 50% of the patients with AE. Sixty percent of them exhibited DIC, whose prognoses were poor. Cerebrospinal fluids (CSF) neopterin (NP) and/or interleukin (IL)-6 were elevated in all the 8 patients examined. In the two cases whose serum NP and IL-6 were measured at the same time, their values in the CSF were higher than those in the serum in one case, and almost the same in the other. In a patient with a condition mimicking hemorrhagic shock and
encephalopathy
, serum IL-6 concentration was very high (94,000 pg/ml). 3. Mild
hypothermia
(around 34 degrees C) combined with methylprednisolone pulse therapy was excellently effective on AE. A 6-year-old boy exhibited tonsillar herniation at admission recovered well to be able to run. 4. Differentiation between Reye syndrome and HSE, and the pathogenesis of AE were also discussed.
...
PMID:[Infection-related acute encephalopathy: CT scan/MRI finding, laboratory examination and prognosis]. 1072 91
Mild
hypothermia
is effective in the prevention of brain edema associated with cerebral ischemia and traumatic brain injury. Brain edema is also a serious complication of acute liver failure (ALF). To assess the effectiveness of
hypothermia
in ALF, groups of rats were subjected to hepatic devascularization (portacaval anastomosis, followed 48 hours later by hepatic artery ligation), and body temperatures were maintained at either 35 degrees C (hypothermic) or 37 degrees C (normothermic). Mild
hypothermia
resulted in a significant delay in the onset of severe
encephalopathy
and in reduction of brain water content compared with normothermic ALF rats (control [n = 8] 80.22%; ALF-37 degrees C [n = 8] 81.74%; ALF-35 degrees C [n = 8] 80.48% [P <.01 compared with ALF-37 degrees C]). This protective effect was accompanied by a significant reduction of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (but not plasma) ammonia concentrations (CSF ammonia: control: 0.05 mg/dL; ALF-37 degrees C: 1.01 mg/dL; ALF-35 degrees C: 0.07 mg/dL, P <.01 compared with ALF-37 degrees C). In vivo cerebral microdialysis studies revealed that mild
hypothermia
resulted in a significant reduction of extracellular glutamate concentrations in the brains of rats with ALF (control: 1. 06 micromol/L; ALF-37 degrees C: 2.74 micromol/L; ALF-35 degrees C: 1.49 micromol/L [P <.01 compared with ALF-37 degrees C]). These findings suggest that: 1) mild
hypothermia
is an effective approach to the prevention of the central nervous system consequences of experimental ALF; and that 2) the beneficial effect of
hypothermia
is mediated via mechanisms involving reduced blood-brain transfer of ammonia and/or reduction of extracellular brain glutamate concentrations. Mild
hypothermia
may be an effective approach to delay the onset of brain edema in patients with ALF awaiting liver transplantation.
...
PMID:Mild hypothermia delays the onset of coma and prevents brain edema and extracellular brain glutamate accumulation in rats with acute liver failure. 1073 42
Objectives were to identify and to evaluate controlled trials of interventions for term infants developing hypoxic-ischaemic
encephalopathy
. Five randomized trials concerning prophylactic anticonvulsant therapy for neonatal HIE were identified. There were methodological problems with all of them, and meta-analysis of barbiturate prophylaxis showed no significant effect on death or disability. One randomized trial of allopurinol showed short-term benfits, but was too small to test death or disability. One small randomized trial of
hypothermia
found no adverse effects, but was too small to examine death or disability. No adequate trials of dexamethasone, calcium channel blockers, magnesium sulphate, or naloxone have yet been completed, but pilot studies in infants have shown the risks of magnesium sulphate and calcium channel blockers.
...
PMID:Systematic review of therapy after hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury in the perinatal period. 1080 48
Perinatal hypoxic-ischaemic
encephalopathy
(HIE) is being studied in laboratory models that allow the delayed cascade of events triggered by the energetic insult to be examined in detail. The concept of the 'excitotoxic cascade' provides a conceptual framework for thinking about the pathogenesis of HIE. Major events in the cascade triggered by hypoxia-ischaemia include overstimulation of N-methyl-D-aspartate type glutamate receptors, calcium entry into cells, activation of calcium-sensitive enzymes such as nitric oxide synthase, production of oxygen free radicals, injury to mitochondria, leading in turn to necrosis or apoptosis. New experimental approaches to salvaging brain tissue from the effects of HIE include inhibition of neuronal nitric oxide synthase, administration of neuronal growth factors, and inhibition of the caspase enzymes that execute apoptosis. Recent experimental work suggests that these approaches may be effective during a longer 'therapeutic window' after the insult, because they are acting on events that are relatively delayed. Application of modest
hypothermia
may allow these agents to be neuroprotective at even longer intervals after hypoxia-ischaemia.
...
PMID:Novel treatments after experimental brain injury. 1080 52
We treated two children with influenza-associated acute
encephalopathy
by a combination of mild
hypothermia
and steroid pulse therapy. Case 1, a 2-year-and-3-month-old boy, admitted to our hospital 7 days after the onset of central nervous symptoms. The brain MRI-CT revealed laminar cortical necrosis and severe brain edema. EEG showed very low voltage. Brain edema improved by the combination therapy. He had sequelae, but was able to eat. Case 2, a 1-year-and-10-month-old boy, admitted to our hospital 5 days after the onset of central nervous symptoms. Brain MRI showed frontal dominant cortical edema. EEG showed high voltage delta bursts. The combination therapy was effective, but he remained mental handicapped. The outcome was better compared to our previous cases of acute
encephalopathy
. The combination therapy is intended to counteract cytokines, and was considered to be an effective treatment against acute
encephalopathy
associated with an influenza virus infection.
...
PMID:[Effects of mild hypothermia and steroid pulse combination therapy on acute encephalopathy associated with influenza virus infection: report of two cases]. 1091 71
We postulate that mitigating the multifactorial pathogenesis of postischemic
encephalopathy
requires multifaceted treatments. In preparation for expensive definitive studies, we are reporting here the results of small exploratory series, compared with historic controls with the same model. We hypothesized that the brain damage mitigating effect of mild
hypothermia
after cardiac arrest can be enhanced with thiopental loading, and even more so with the further addition of phenytoin and methylprednisolone. Twenty-four dogs (four groups of six dogs each) received VF 12.5 min no-flow, reversed with brief cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), controlled ventilation to 20 h, and intensive care to 96 h. Group 1 with normothermia throughout and randomized group 2 with mild
hypothermia
(from reperfusion to 2 h) were controls. Then, group 3 received in addition, thiopental 90 mg/kg i.v. over the first 6 h. Then, group 4 received, in addition to group 2 treatment, thiopental 30 mg/kg i.v. over the first 90 min (because the larger dose had produced cardiopulmonary complications), plus phenytoin 15 mg/kg i.v. at 15 min after reperfusion, and methylprednisolone 130 mg/kg i.v. over 20 h. All dogs survived. Best overall performance categories (OPC) achieved (OPC 1 = normal, OPC 5 = brain death) were better in group 2 than group 1 (< 0.05) and numerically better in groups 3 or 4 than in groups 1 or 2. Good cerebral outcome (OPC 1 or 2) was achieved by all six dogs only in group 4 (P < 0.05 group 4 vs. 2). Best NDS were 44 +/- 3% in group 1; 20 +/- 14% in group 2 (P = 0.002); 21 +/- 15% in group 3 (NS vs. group 2); and 7 +/- 8% in group 4 (P = 0.08 vs. group 2). Total brain histologic damage scores (HDS) at 96 h were 156 +/- 38 in group 1; 81 +/- 12 in group 2 (P < 0.001 vs. group 1); 53 +/- 25 in group 3 (P = 0.02 vs. group 2); and 48 +/- 5 in group 4 (P = 0.02 vs. group 2). We conclude that after prolonged cardiac arrest, the already established brain damage mitigating effect of mild immediate postarrest
hypothermia
might be enhanced by thiopental, and perhaps then further enhanced by adding phenytoin and methylprednisolone.
...
PMID:Thiopental combination treatments for cerebral resuscitation after prolonged cardiac arrest in dogs. Exploratory outcome study. 1095 Mar 20
Two children with influenza A-related
encephalopathy
were treated with a combination of mild
hypothermia
(deep body temperature of the forehead: 35 degrees C) and anticytokine agents (high-dose methylprednisolone and ulinastatin), while receiving amantadine. One of the cases exhibited acute necrotizing
encephalopathy
on computed tomography (CT). Although no severe complications occurred, correctable hypokalemia and hyperglycemia occurred in both cases. Both patients recovered without any neurological sequelae. Our therapeutic protocol appears to be effective for managing influenza A-related
encephalopathy
.
...
PMID:Combined therapy with hypothermia and anticytokine agents in influenza A encephalopathy. 1104 19
Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in neonates is often difficult to diagnose in "real time" at the bedside because of the variety of disorders that can cause neonatal seizures and other nonspecific signs of
encephalopathy
. Standard interventions to support respiratory and cardiovascular disorders associated with HIE are appropriate, but none has been demonstrated to alter neurologic outcome. Anticonvulsants are indicated when seizures are observed, although they are considered a sign of HIE rather than a cause of injury. There is overwhelming evidence that the excitotoxic cascade that evolves during HIE extends over several days after the insult and is modifiable. Clinical trials of potentially neuroprotective interventions such as
hypothermia
are under way.
...
PMID:Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy. 1109 41
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