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Effect of graded hyperventilation on cerebral metabolism in a cisterna magna blood injection model of subarachnoid hemorrhage in rats
Authors:Ma Xiaodong  Bay-Hansen Rikke  Hauerberg John  Knudsen Gitte Moos  Olsen Niels Vidiendal  Juhler Marianne
Institution:Department of Neurosurgery, Neuroscience Center, Copenhagen University Hospital (Rigshospitalet), Copenhagen, Denmark.
Abstract:In subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) with cerebrovascular instability, hyperventilation may induce a risk of inducing or aggravating cerebral ischemia. We measured cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral metabolic rates of oxygen (CMRO2), glucose (CMRglc), and lactate (CMRlac) at different PaCO2 levels after experimental SAH in rats (injection of 0.07 mL of autologous blood into the cisterna magna). Four groups of Sprague-Dawley male rats were studied at predetermined PaCO2 levels: group A: normocapnia (5.01-5.66 kPa 38.0-42.0 mm Hg]); group B: slight hyperventilation (4.34-5.00 kPa 32.5-37.5 mm Hg]); group C: moderate hyperventilation (3.67-4.33 kPa 27.5-32.4 mm Hg]); group D: profound hyperventilation (3.00-3.66 kPa 22.5-27.4 mm Hg]). Each of the four groups included eight rats with SAH and eight sham-operated controls. CBF was determined by the intracarotid Xe method; CMRo2, CMRglc, and CMRlac were obtained by cerebral arteriovenous differences. In both SAH rats and controls, hyperventilation decreased CBF in proportion to the decrement in PaCO2 without affecting either CMRO2, CMRglc, or CMRlac. In groups C and D, CBF decreased by 20%-35%, but CMRs were maintained by a compensatory increase in oxygen extraction fraction (OEF). The results show that even profound hyperventilation in this model of SAH is associated with an adequate increase in OEF so that CMRs of oxygen, glucose, and lactate remain similar to levels observed in normocapnic conditions.
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