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Anesthesia and analgesia · Aug 2003
Clinical TrialThe effects of large-dose propofol on cerebrovascular pressure autoregulation in head-injured patients.
- Luzius A Steiner, Andrew J Johnston, Doris A Chatfield, Marek Czosnyka, Martin R Coleman, Jonathan P Coles, Arun K Gupta, John D Pickard, and David K Menon.
- *Academic Neurosurgery, †University Department of Anaesthesia, and ‡Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
- Anesth. Analg. 2003 Aug 1; 97 (2): 572-576.
UnlabelledIn healthy individuals, cerebrovascular pressure autoregulation is preserved or even improved when propofol is infused. We examined the effect of an increase in propofol plasma concentration on pressure autoregulation in 10 head-injured patients. Using target-controlled infusions, the static rate of autoregulation was determined at a moderate (2.3 +/- 0.4 microg/mL) and a large (4.3 +/- 0.04 microg/mL) plasma target concentration of propofol. Using norepinephrine to control cerebral perfusion pressure, transcranial Doppler measurements from the middle cerebral artery were made at a cerebral perfusion pressure of 70 and 85 mm Hg at each propofol concentration. Middle cerebral artery flow velocities at the large propofol concentration were significantly lower than at the moderate concentration, without any concurrent increase in arterio-jugular difference in oxygen content, a finding compatible with maintained flow-metabolism coupling. Despite this, static rate of autoregulation decreased significantly from 54% +/- 36% to 28% +/- 35% (P = 0.029). Our data suggest that after head injury, the cerebrovascular effects of propofol are different from those observed in healthy individuals. We propose that large doses of propofol should be used cautiously in head-injured patients, because there is the potential to increase the injured brain's vulnerability to secondary insults.ImplicationsPropofol is used for sedation and control of intracranial pressure in head-injured patients. In contrast to previous data from healthy individuals, we show a deterioration of cerebrovascular pressure autoregulation with fast propofol infusion rates after head injury. Large propofol doses may increase the injured brain's vulnerability to secondary insults.
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