Dietrich W Dalton, Bramlett Helen M
Department of Neurological Surgery, The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, United States.
Department of Neurological Surgery, The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, United States.
Brain Res. 2016 Jun 1;1640(Pt A):94-103. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2015.12.034. Epub 2015 Dec 30.
The use of therapeutic hypothermia (TH) and targeted temperature management (TTM) for severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been tested in a variety of preclinical and clinical situations. Early preclinical studies showed that mild reductions in brain temperature after moderate to severe TBI improved histopathological outcomes and reduced neurological deficits. Investigative studies have also reported that reductions in post-traumatic temperature attenuated multiple secondary injury mechanisms including excitotoxicity, free radical generation, apoptotic cell death, and inflammation. In addition, while elevations in post-traumatic temperature heightened secondary injury mechanisms, the successful implementation of TTM strategies in injured patients to reduce fever burden appear to be beneficial. While TH has been successfully tested in a number of single institutional clinical TBI studies, larger randomized multicenter trials have failed to demonstrate the benefits of therapeutic hypothermia. The use of TH and TTM for treating TBI continues to evolve and a number of factors including patient selection and the timing of the TH appear to be critical in successful trial design. Based on available data, it is apparent that TH and TTM strategies for treating severely injured patients is an important therapeutic consideration that requires more basic and clinical research. Current research involves the evaluation of alternative cooling strategies including pharmacologically-induced hypothermia and the combination of TH or TTM approaches with more selective neuroprotective or reparative treatments. This manuscript summarizes the preclinical and clinical literature emphasizing the importance of brain temperature in modifying secondary injury mechanisms and in improving traumatic outcomes in severely injured patients. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled SI:Brain injury and recovery.
治疗性低温(TH)和目标温度管理(TTM)在重度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)中的应用已在多种临床前和临床情况下进行了测试。早期临床前研究表明,中重度TBI后脑温轻度降低可改善组织病理学结果并减少神经功能缺损。研究性研究还报告称,创伤后体温降低可减轻多种继发性损伤机制,包括兴奋性毒性、自由基生成、凋亡性细胞死亡和炎症。此外,虽然创伤后体温升高会加剧继发性损伤机制,但在受伤患者中成功实施TTM策略以减轻发热负担似乎是有益的。虽然TH已在多项单机构临床TBI研究中成功测试,但更大规模的随机多中心试验未能证明治疗性低温的益处。TH和TTM在治疗TBI中的应用仍在不断发展,包括患者选择和TH时机在内的许多因素在成功的试验设计中似乎至关重要。根据现有数据,显然TH和TTM策略对治疗重伤患者是一项重要的治疗考虑因素,需要更多的基础和临床研究。当前的研究包括评估替代降温策略,如药物诱导性低温以及TH或TTM方法与更具选择性的神经保护或修复性治疗的联合应用。本手稿总结了临床前和临床文献,强调了脑温在改变继发性损伤机制和改善重伤患者创伤结局方面的重要性。本文是名为“SI:脑损伤与恢复”的特刊的一部分。