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  4. Hypertonic Lactate to Improve Cerebral Perfusion and Glucose Availability After Acute Brain Injury
 
research article

Hypertonic Lactate to Improve Cerebral Perfusion and Glucose Availability After Acute Brain Injury

Carteron, Laurent
•
Solari, Daria
•
Patet, Camille
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October 1, 2018
Critical Care Medicine

Objectives: Lactate promotes cerebral blood flow and is an efficient substrate for the brain, particularly at times of glucose shortage. Hypertonic lactate is neuroprotective after experimental brain injury; however, human data are limited.

Design: Prospective study (clinicaltrials.gov NCT01573507).

Setting: Academic ICU.

Patients: Twenty-three brain-injured subjects (13 traumatic brain injury/10 subarachnoid hemorrhage; median age, 59 yr [41-65 yr]; median Glasgow Coma Scale, 6 [3-7]).

Interventions: Three-hour IV infusion of hypertonic lactate (sodium lactate, 1,000 mmol/L; concentration, 30 mu mol/kg/min) administered 39 hours (26-49hr) from injury.

Measurements and Main Results: We examined the effect of hypertonic lactate on cerebral perfusion (using transcranial Doppler) and brain energy metabolism (using cerebral microdialysis). The majority of subjects (13/23 = 57%) had reduced brain glucose availability (baseline pretreatment cerebral microdialysis glucose, < 1 mmol/L) despite normal baseline intracranial pressure (10 [7-15] mm Hg). Hypertonic lactate was associated with increased cerebral microdialysis lactate (+55% [31-80%]) that was paralleled by an increase in middle cerebral artery mean cerebral blood flow velocities (+36% [21-66%]) and a decrease in pulsatility index (-21% [13-26%]; all p < 0.001). Cerebral microdialysis glucose increased above normal range during hypertonic lactate (+42% [30-78%]; p < 0.05); reduced brain glucose availability correlated with a greater improvement of cerebral microdialysis glucose (Spearman r = -0.53; p = 0.009). No significant changes in cerebral perfusion pressure, mean arterial pressure, systemic carbon dioxide, and blood glucose were observed during hypertonic lactate (all p > 0.1).

Conclusions: This is the first clinical demonstration that hypertonic lactate resuscitation improves both cerebral perfusion and brain glucose availability after brain injury. These cerebral vascular and metabolic effects appeared related to brain lactate supplementation rather than to systemic effects.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1097/CCM.0000000000003274
Web of Science ID

WOS:000444480100019

Author(s)
Carteron, Laurent
Solari, Daria
Patet, Camille
Quintard, Herve
Miroz, John-Paul
Bloch, Jocelyne
Daniel, Roy T.
Hirt, Lorenz
Eckert, Philippe
Magistretti, Pierre J.  
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Date Issued

2018-10-01

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS

Published in
Critical Care Medicine
Volume

46

Issue

10

Start page

1649

End page

1655

Subjects

Critical Care Medicine

•

General & Internal Medicine

•

brain metabolism

•

cerebral microdialysis

•

cerebral perfusion

•

glucose

•

hypertonic

•

lactate

•

intracranial hypertensive episodes

•

nuclear-magnetic-resonance

•

in-vivo evidence

•

blood-flow

•

subarachnoid hemorrhage

•

energy-metabolism

•

sodium lactate

•

microdialysis

•

oxygen

•

astrocytes

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNDC  
Available on Infoscience
December 13, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/152724
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