Targeted Perfusion Therapy in Spinal Cord Trauma.
Samira SaadounMarios C PapadopoulosPublished in: Neurotherapeutics : the journal of the American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics (2021)
We review state-of-the-art monitoring techniques for acute, severe traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) to facilitate targeted perfusion of the injured cord rather than applying universal mean arterial pressure targets. Key concepts are discussed such as intraspinal pressure and spinal cord perfusion pressure (SCPP) at the injury site, respectively, analogous to intracranial pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure for traumatic brain injury. The concept of spinal cord autoregulation is introduced and quantified using spinal pressure reactivity index (sPRx), which is analogous to pressure reactivity index for traumatic brain injury. The U-shaped relationship between sPRx and SCPP defines the optimum SCPP as the SCPP that minimizes sPRx (i.e., maximizes autoregulation), and suggests that not only ischemia but also hyperemia at the injury site may be detrimental. The observation that optimum SCPP varies between patients and temporally in each patient supports individualized management. We discuss multimodality monitoring, which revealed strong correlations between SCPP and injury site metabolism (tissue glucose, lactate, pyruvate, glutamate, glycerol), monitored by surface microdialysis. Evidence is presented that the dura is a major, but unappreciated, cause of spinal cord compression after TSCI; we thus propose expansion duroplasty as a novel treatment. Monitoring spinal cord blood flow at the injury site has revealed novel phenomena, e.g., 3 distinct blood flow patterns, local steal, and diastolic ischemia. We conclude that monitoring from the injured spinal cord in the intensive care unit is a safe technique that appears to enable optimized and individualized spinal cord perfusion.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord
- spinal cord injury
- blood flow
- neuropathic pain
- traumatic brain injury
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- left ventricular
- intensive care unit
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- case report
- adipose tissue
- drug induced
- prognostic factors
- skeletal muscle
- smoking cessation
- respiratory failure
- blood pressure
- blood brain barrier
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- cancer therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- early onset
- peritoneal dialysis
- metabolic syndrome
- patient reported