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Impact of Hypothermia Initiation and Duration on Perihemorrhagic Edema Evolution After Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Author(s) -
Bastian Volbers,
Sabrina Herrmann,
Wolfgang Willfarth,
Hannes Lücking,
Stephan Kloska,
Arnd Doerfler,
Hagen B. Huttner,
Joji B. Kuramatsu,
Stefan Schwab,
Dimitre Staykov
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
stroke
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.397
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1524-4628
pISSN - 0039-2499
DOI - 10.1161/strokeaha.116.013486
Subject(s) - medicine , intracerebral hemorrhage , hypothermia , anesthesia , edema , brain edema , cerebral edema , stroke (engine) , surgery , subarachnoid hemorrhage , mechanical engineering , engineering
Background and Purpose— Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) causes high morbidity and mortality. Recently, perihemorrhagic edema (PHE) has been suggested as an important prognostic factor. Therapeutic hypothermia may be a promising therapeutic option to treat PHE. However, no data exist about the optimal timing and duration of therapeutic hypothermia in ICH. We examined the impact of therapeutic hypothermia timing and duration on PHE evolution. Methods— In this retrospective, single-center, case–control study, we identified patients with ICH treated with mild endovascular hypothermia (target temperature 35°C) from our institutional database. Patients were grouped according to hypothermia initiation (early: days 1–2 and late: days 4–5 after admission) and hypothermia duration (short: 4–8 days and long: 9–15 days). Patients with ICH matched for ICH volume, age, ICH localization, and intraventricular hemorrhage were identified as controls. Relative PHE, temperature, and intracranial pressure course were analyzed. Clinical outcome on day 90 was assessed using the modified Rankin scale (0–3=favorable and 4–6=poor). Results— Thirty-three patients with ICH treated with hypothermia and 37 control patients were included. Early hypothermia initiation led to relative PHE decrease between admission and day 3, whereas median relative PHE increased in control patients (−0.05 [interquartile range, −0.4 to 0.07] and 0.07 [interquartile range, −0.07 to 0.26], respectively;P =0.007) and patients with late hypothermia initiation (0.22 [interquartile range 0.12–0.27];P =0.037). After day 3, relative PHE increased in all groups without difference. Outcome was not different between patients treated with hypothermia and controls.Conclusions— Early hypothermia initiation after ICH onset seems to have an important impact on PHE evolution, whereas our data suggest only limited impact later than day 3 after onset.

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