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Hypocapnia, ischemic lesions, and outcomes after intracerebral hemorrhage

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-10-08, 09:59 authored by Shannon HextrumMD, Jatinder S MinhasMD, Eric M LiottaMD, Farzaneh A SorondMD, Andrew M NaidechMD, Matthew B MaasMD
Background
An association between spontaneous hyperventilation, delayed cerebral ischemia, and poor clinical outcomes has been reported in subarachnoid hemorrhage. We evaluated the relationship between early pCO2 changes, ischemic lesions and outcomes in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH).

Methods
Consecutive patients with spontaneous ICH were enrolled in an observational cohort study conducted between 2006 and 2019. Patient characteristics and discharge outcome were prospectively recorded. Arterial blood gas (ABG) measurements and mechanical ventilation settings in the first 72 h of admission were retrospectively collected. MRI images were adjudicated for diffusion-restricted lesions consistent with ischemia and distant from the hematoma. We examined the associations between pCO2 changes, ischemic lesions, and discharge outcomes by univariate and adjusted analyses.

Results
ABG data were available for 220 patients. Hyperventilation occurred in 52 (28%) cases and was not associated with clinical severity. Lower initial pCO2 was associated with greater risk of in-hospital death (OR 0.94 per mmHg, 95%CI [0.89, 0.996], p = 0.042) after adjustment for ICH Score, pneumonia and mechanical ventilation requirements. MRI data were available for 33 patients. Lower pCO2 was associated with a higher risk of ischemic lesions, except in patients with low initial systolic blood pressure (p < 0.05 for main and blood pressure interaction effects), after adjustment for other predictors.

Conclusions
In ICH patients with spontaneous ventilation, lower pCO2 was independently associated with greater risk of in-hospital death. In patients with elevated initial blood pressure, who undergo blood pressure reduction per guideline recommendations, lower pCO2 was associated with increased risk to develop ischemic lesions.

History

Citation

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, Volume 418, 15 November 2020, 117139

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of the Neurological Sciences

Volume

418

Pagination

117139

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0022-510X

Acceptance date

2020-09-10

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-09-12

Language

en

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