我们集团组织了 3000 多个全球系列会议 每年在美国、欧洲和美国举办的活动亚洲得到 1000 多个科学协会的支持 并出版了 700+ 开放获取期刊包含超过50000名知名人士、知名科学家担任编委会成员。

开放获取期刊获得更多读者和引用
700 种期刊 15,000,000 名读者 每份期刊 获得 25,000 多名读者

抽象的

Cerebral Oxygenation Using Near-infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) before, during and after Therapeutic Hypothermia: A Comparison of Cerebral Saturations between those Infants on Sedatives and Anti-Epileptics and those who are not, all of whom are Undergoing Cooling

Dixon CM and Rais-Bahrami K

Objectives: The aims of this study include the following: to determine the effect of therapeutic hypothermia (Cooling) on cerebral saturations using Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) before, during and after therapeutic hypothermia; to compare these values between infants receiving sedative and anti-epileptic medications and those who do not.

Methods: This study is a retrospective chart review of patients from Children’s National Medical Center (CNMC) Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) who underwent therapeutic hypothermia with NIRS monitoring from July 2009- December 2014. Cerebral tissue saturations (StO2) using NIRS tissue oximeter (FORE-SIGHT, CAS Medical Systems, Branford, CT, USA) were assessed during the cooling period. StO2 were periodically recorded during 3 phases: before cooling was started, during cooling, and after cooling (30 minutes of rewarming) and averaged to a composite value for each event. Data was then compared based on whether the patient received sedatives and/or anti-epileptic medications.

Results: Complete data sets were obtained for 57 subjects, weighting 1.8 kg-4.9 kg, 1-7 days old and gestational age 35.6-42.0 weeks. Cerebral tissue saturations were significantly higher during cooling (paired t-test). Those on Phenobarbital and/or Versed had significantly higher saturations compared to those on no medications. Those on only Phenobarbital also had significantly higher saturations, but to a lesser degree. Subjects where StO2 failed to rise during cooling had a higher chance of dying, perhaps due to critical brain tissue damage from lack of oxygen during birth asphyxia, or failure to recover thereafter.

Conclusions: Data from this study suggests that cerebral tissue saturations increase during therapeutic hypothermia, likely due to suppressed cerebral metabolism. Those on anti-seizures medications