Brain injury following cardiac arrest (CA) is thought to be caused by a sudden loss of blood flow resulting in disruption in oxygen delivery, neural function and metabolism. However, temporal… Click to show full abstract
Brain injury following cardiac arrest (CA) is thought to be caused by a sudden loss of blood flow resulting in disruption in oxygen delivery, neural function and metabolism. However, temporal trajectories of the brain's physiology in the first few hours following CA have not been fully characterized. Furthermore, the extent to which these early measures can predict future neurological outcomes has not been determined. The present study sought to perform dynamic measurements of cerebral blood flow (CBF), oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) and cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2) with MRI in the first 3 hours following the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in a rat CA model. It was found that CBF, OEF and CMRO2 all revealed a time‐dependent increase during the first 3 hours after the ROSC. Furthermore, the temporal trajectories of CBF and CMRO2, but not OEF, were different across rats and related to neurologic outcomes at a later time (24 hours after the ROSC) (P < .001). Rats who manifested better outcomes revealed faster increases in CBF and CMRO2 during the acute stage. When investigating physiological parameters measured at a single time point, CBF (ρ = 0.82, P = .004) and CMRO2 (ρ = 0.80, P = .006) measured at ~ 3 hours post‐ROSC were positively associated with neurologic outcome scores at 24 hours. These findings shed light on brain physiological changes following CA, and suggest that MRI measures of brain perfusion and metabolism may provide a potential biomarker to guide post‐CA management.
               
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