Cerebral edema and intracranial hypertension, commonly present in fulminant hepatic failure, may lead to brainstem herniation and limit the survival of comatose patients awaiting liver transplantation before a donor organ becomes available. Also, they are likely responsible for postoperative neurological morbidity and mortality. Although intracranial pressure monitoring has been proposed to aid clinical decision making in this setting, its use in the prevention of brainstem herniation preoperatively, in the selection of patients for liver transplantation who have the potential for neurological recovery and in the maintenance of cerebral perfusion during liver transplantation has not been examined in detail. To address these issues, we established a protocol for intracranial pressure monitoring in comatose patients with fulminant hepatic failure as part of their preoperative and intraoperative management. Twenty adults and three children underwent intracranial pressure monitoring. Ten patients required preoperative medical therapy with mannitol, barbiturates or both for a rise in intracranial pressure above 25 mm Hg. Four patients had a sustained lowering of intracranial pressure, three of whom survived hospitalization. Six patients had intracranial hypertension refractory to medical management, were removed from a waiting list for a donor organ and died with brainstem herniation. Of the remaining 17 patients, 3 died of other causes while awaiting a donor organ, 2 recovered spontaneously without neurological sequelae and 12 underwent liver transplantation. All but one patient undergoing liver transplantation had transient intraoperative intracranial hypertension develop, requiring medical treatment. The 12 patients who had transplants recovered neurologically and were discharged from the hospital.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
We studied the effects of noxious stimuli on arterial blood pressure, heart rate, pupil size, and the pupillary light reflex in 13 volunteers anesthetized with either isoflurane or propofol. Those given isoflurane (n = 8) were anesthetized twice, in a randomly selected order, once at an end-tidal concentration of 0.8% and once at 1.2%. An intense noxious stimulus was provided by electrical stimulation applied to skin of the abdominal wall (65-70 mA, 100 Hz). Hemodynamic values and pupillary responses were recorded immediately before stimulation and at 15-60-s intervals during 8 subsequent min. In the volunteers given isoflurane (both concentrations), stimulation significantly increased pupil size (265 +/- 44%) and the amplitude of the light reflex (233 +/- 23%). In contrast, mean heart rate and systolic blood pressure increased only 19 +/- 7% and 13 +/- 7% after stimulation. Five additional volunteers were anesthetized twice with propofol (approximately 3 micrograms/mL plasma concentration) and 60% nitrous oxide. The same electrical stimulus was applied, and hemodynamic and pupillary measurements were obtained. During one propofol anesthetic, an esmolol infusion (100 micrograms.kg-1 x min-1) was started 10 min before stimulation to determine whether this agent would blunt the pupillary response. The pupillary light reflex increased more than 200% during both propofol anesthetics with or without esmolol; once again, heart rate and blood pressure changed little. We conclude that with these experimental conditions, the pupil is a more sensitive measure of noxious stimulation than the commonly used variables of arterial blood pressure and heart rate.
The authors tested the hypotheses that isoflurane anesthesia increases the threshold for sweating but minimally decreases the gain (sensitivity) or maximum intensity of this response and that thermoregulatory responses to hyperthermia are similar in anesthetized men and women. Sweating in response to core hyperthermia was studied in five men and five women during 0, 0.8, and 1.2% end-tidal isoflurane anesthesia. Thigh sweating was quantified by measuring gas flow, relative humidity, and temperature passing over a known surface area. The distal esophageal temperature triggering sweating was considered the sweating threshold, and gain was defined as the core temperature increment required to increase sweating rate from 25 to 75% of maximum observed intensity. The sweating threshold increased linearly with isoflurane concentration from 36.6 +/- 0.1 to 38.1 +/- 0.1 degrees C in the men and from 37.1 +/- 0.3 to 38.3 +/- 0.2 degrees C in the women. The thresholds were significantly higher in women than in men. Gain and maximum sweating intensities were similar at each anesthetic concentration and in men and women. These data indicate that isoflurane anesthesia significantly increases the threshold triggering thermoregulatory sweating but that gain and maximum sweating rate are relatively well preserved.
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