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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Cerebral hemodynamic effects of morphine and fentanyl in patients with severe head injury: absence of correlation to cerebral autoregulation.
- M de Nadal, F Munar, M A Poca, J Sahuquillo, A Garnacho, and J Rosselló.
- Department of Anesthesiology, Vall d'Hebron University Hospitals, Barcelona, Spain. mdenadal@compuserve.com
- Anesthesiology. 2000 Jan 1; 92 (1): 11-9.
BackgroundThe current study investigates the effects of morphine and fentanyl upon intracranial pressure and cerebral blood flow estimated by cerebral arteriovenous oxygen content difference and transcranial Doppler sonography in 30 consecutive patients with severe head injury in whom cerebrovascular autoregulation previously had been assessed.MethodsPatients received morphine (0.2 mg/kg) and fentanyl (2 microg/kg) intravenously over 1 min but 24 h apart in a randomized fashion. Before study, carbon dioxide reactivity and autoregulation were assessed. Intracranial pressure, mean arterial blood pressure, and cerebral perfusion pressure were repeatedly monitored for 1 h after the administration of both opioids. Cerebral blood flow was estimated from the reciprocal of arteriovenous oxygen content difference and middle cerebral artery mean flow velocity using transcranial Doppler sonography.ResultsAlthough carbon dioxide reactivity was preserved in all patients, 18 patients (56.7%) showed impaired or abolished autoregulation to hypertensive challenge, and only 12 (43.3%) had preserved autoregulation. Both morphine and fentanyl caused significant increases in intracranial pressure and decreases in mean arterial blood pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure, but estimated cerebral blood flow remain unchanged. In patients with preserved autoregulation, opioid-induced intracranial pressure increases were not different than in those with impaired autoregulation.ConclusionsThe authors conclude that both morphine and fentanyl moderately increase intracranial pressure and decrease mean arterial blood pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure but have no significant effect on arteriovenous oxygen content difference and middle cerebral artery mean flow velocity in patients with severe brain injury. No differences on intracranial pressure changes were found between patients with preserved and impaired autoregulation. Our results suggest that other mechanisms, besides the activation of the vasodilatory cascade, also could be implicated in the intracranial pressure increases seen after opioid administration.
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