Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 2001
The impact of hypercarbia on the evolution of brain injury in a porcine model of traumatic brain injury and systemic hemorrhage.
Carbon dioxide is perhaps the most potent available modulator of cerebrovascular tone and thus cerebral blood flow (CBF). These experiments evaluate the impact of induced hypercarbia on the matching of blood flow and metabolism in the injured brain. We explore the hypothesis that hypercarbia will restore the relationship of CBF to metabolic demand, resulting in improved outcome following traumatic brain injury (TBI) and hemorrhage. ⋯ Parenchymal injury was significantly decreased in hypercarbic animals: 3/10 hypercarbic versus 6/8 normocarbic animals showed cerebral contusions at the gray/white interface (p = 0.05). The hypercarbic group had significantly better behavioral outcome scores, 10.5, versus 7.3 for the normocarbic groups (p = 0.005). The decreased incidence of cerebral contusion and improved behavioral outcome scores in our experiments appear to be mediated by better matching of cerebral metabolism and blood flow, suggesting that manipulations modulating the balance of blood flow and metabolism in injured brain may improve outcomes from TBI.