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Choice of Whole Blood versus Lactated Ringer's Resuscitation Modifies the Relationship between Blood Pressure Target and Functional Outcome after Traumatic Brain Injury plus Hemorrhagic Shock in Mice.

Authors :
Zusman BE
Dixon CE
Jha RM
Vagni VA
Henchir JJ
Carlson SW
Janesko-Feldman KL
Bailey ZS
Shear DA
Gilsdorf JS
Kochanek PM
Source :
Journal of neurotrauma [J Neurotrauma] 2021 Oct 15; Vol. 38 (20), pp. 2907-2917. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Sep 15.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Civilian traumatic brain injury (TBI) guidelines recommend resuscitation of patients with hypotensive TBI with crystalloids. Increasing evidence, however, suggests that whole blood (WB) resuscitation may improve physiological and survival outcomes at lower resuscitation volumes, and potentially at a lower mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), than crystalloid after TBI and hemorrhagic shock (HS). The objective of this study was to assess whether WB resuscitation with two different MAP targets improved behavioral and histological outcomes compared with lactated Ringer's (LR) in a mouse model of TBI+HS. Anesthetized mice ( n  = 40) underwent controlled cortical impact (CCI) followed by HS (MAP = 25-27 mm Hg; 25 min) and were randomized to five groups for a 90 min resuscitation: LR with MAP target of 70 mm Hg (LR <subscript>70</subscript> ), LR <subscript>60</subscript> , WB <subscript>70</subscript> , WB <subscript>60</subscript> , and monitored sham. Mice received a 20 mL/kg bolus of LR or autologous WB followed by LR boluses (10 mL/kg) every 5 min for MAP below target. Shed blood was reinfused after 90 min. Morris Water Maze testing was performed on days 14-20 post-injury. Mice were euthanized (21 d) to assess contusion and total brain volumes. Latency to find the hidden platform was greater versus sham for LR <subscript>60</subscript> ( p  < 0.002) and WB <subscript>70</subscript> ( p  < 0.007) but not LR <subscript>70</subscript> or WB <subscript>60</subscript> . The WB resuscitation did not reduce contusion volume or brain tissue loss. The WB targeting a MAP of 60 mm Hg did not compromise function versus a 70 mm Hg target after CCI+HS, but further reduced fluid requirements ( p < 0.03). Using LR, higher achieved MAP was associated with better behavioral performance (rho = -0.67, p =  0.028). Use of WB may allow lower MAP targets without compromising functional outcome, which could facilitate pre-hospital TBI resuscitation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1557-9042
Volume :
38
Issue :
20
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neurotrauma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34269621
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2021.0157