Effects of sodium nitroprusside administered via a subdural intracranial catheter on the microcirculation, oxygenation, and electrocortical activity of the cerebral cortex in a pig cardiac arrest model

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Title
Effects of sodium nitroprusside administered via a subdural intracranial catheter on the microcirculation, oxygenation, and electrocortical activity of the cerebral cortex in a pig cardiac arrest model
Author(s)
H Y Lee; Y H Jung; N Mamadjonov; K W Jeung; M C Kim; Kyung Seob LimChang-Yeop JeonYoungjeon Lee; H J Kim
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of American Heart Association, vol. 11, no. 11, pp. 025400-025400
Publication Year
2022
Abstract
Background Postischemic cerebral hypoperfusion has been indicated as an important contributing factor to secondary cerebral injury after cardiac arrest. We evaluated the effects of sodium nitroprusside administered via a subdural intracranial catheter on the microcirculation, oxygenation, and electrocortical activity of the cerebral cortex in the early postresuscitation period using a pig model of cardiac arrest. Methods and Results Twenty-nine pigs were resuscitated with closed cardiopulmonary resuscitation after 14 minutes of untreated ventricular fibrillation. Thirty minutes after restoration of spontaneous circulation, 24 pigs randomly received either 4 mg of sodium nitroprusside (IT-SNP group) or saline placebo (IT-saline group) via subdural intracranial catheters and were observed for 5 hours. The same dose of sodium nitroprusside was administered intravenously in another 5 pigs. Compared with the IT-saline group, the IT-SNP group had larger areas under the curve for tissue oxygen tension and percent changes of arteriole diameter and number of perfused microvessels from baseline (all P<0.05) monitored on the cerebral cortex during the 5-hour period, without severe hemodynamic instability. This group also showed faster recovery of electrocortical activity measured using amplitude-integrated electroencephalography. Repeated-measures analysis of variance revealed significant group-time interactions for these parameters. Intravenously administered sodium nitroprusside caused profound hypotension but did not appear to increase the cerebral parameters. Conclusions Sodium nitroprusside administered via a subdural intracranial catheter increased post-restoration of spontaneous circulation cerebral cortical microcirculation and oxygenation and hastened electrocortical activity recovery in a pig model of cardiac arrest. Further studies are required to determine its impact on the long-term neurologic outcomes.
Keyword
Heart arrestHypoxiaIschemiaVasodilator agents
ISSN
2047-9980
Publisher
Wiley
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.122.025400
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > Futuristic Animal Resource & Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > National Primate Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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