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Welcome to this issue of touchREVIEWS in Neurology, where we explore significant advances in neurology, cognitive health, and wearable technology in the management of various chronic conditions. This issue brings together a collection of expert perspectives and research that spans innovative therapies, preventive strategies, and case studies, each offering critical insights for clinicians and researchers. […]

Tailored Temperature Management in Neurocritical Care

Catherine Amey
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Published Online: Jul 28th 2016 European Neurological Review, 2016;11(Suppl. 1):2–4
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Abstract

Overview

Temperature management to avoid fever is standard practice in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), subarachnoid
haemorrhage and stroke. The aim is to reduce post-injury oedema and control elevated intracranial pressure (ICP). However, despite standard care, temperatures exceeding 37.5°C are common in patients with brain injuries and temperature control is often problematic in patients with haemorrhagic or traumatic injuries in which the hypothalamus and temperature control areas are disturbed by the cerebral insult. The effect of cooling on brain swelling has been widely studied in patients in the neuro-intensive care unit and in a systematic review of patients with severe TBI, all studies showed that early prophylactic hypothermia from 32°C to 34°C consistently reduced ICP compared with normothermia (37°C). However, high-quality clinical evidence to support the use of normothermia versus targeted temperature management ≤35°C in adults is lacking and a randomised controlled trial is warranted. At present, optimal temperature thresholds and duration of temperature management should be tailored to the clinical scenario and the
severity of the injury, particularly regarding ICP.

Keywords

Traumatic brain injury (TBI), tailored temperature management (TTM), neuroprotection, intensive care unit (ICU), intracranial pressure (ICP)

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Article

Report from a Satellite Symposium held at the 28th Annual Congress of the European Society for Intensive Care Medicine, Berlin, Germany, 5 October 2015

Temperature management to avoid fever is standard practice in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), subarachnoid haemorrhage and stroke. The aim is to reduce post-injury oedema and control elevated intracranial pressure (ICP). However, despite standard care, temperatures exceeding 37.5°C are common in patients with brain injuries and temperature control is often problematic in patients with haemorrhagic or traumatic injuries in which the hypothalamus and temperature control areas are disturbed by the cerebral insult. The effect of cooling on brain swelling has been widely studied in patients in the neuro-intensive care unit and in a systematic review of patients with severe TBI, all studies showed that early prophylactic hypothermia from 32°C to 34°C consistently reduced ICP compared with normothermia (37°C). However, high-quality clinical evidence to support the use of normothermia versus targeted temperature management ≤35°C in adults is lacking and a randomised controlled trial is warranted. At present, optimal temperature thresholds and duration of temperature management should be tailored to the clinical scenario and the severity of the injury, particularly regarding ICP.

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of death and serious disability worldwide.1 Hyperthermia is thought to worsen neurological injury in patients with traumatic or ischaemic brain injury and treatment of fever in this setting is a critical clinical issue that needs improved management.2 After the primary injury such as stroke, several pathophysiological processes occur, all of which are temperature-dependent, and aggravated by fever, a secondary injury can develop over the course of hours to days, that may involve oedema, swelling, high intracranial pressure (ICP), ischaemia and reduced perfusion.1 Fever was common in critically ill neurosurgical patients, especially those with a prolonged length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) in a retrospective chart review of febrile episodes over a six-month period (Figure 1).2 Out of the 428 patients studied there were 946 febrile episodes. Fever occurred in 47% of patients, with an average of 4.7 febrile episodes. Fevers occurred in 15% of the patients who stayed in the ICU less than 24 hours, but in 93% of those who remained in the ICU for longer than 14 days. Even with antipyretic therapy use for 86% of the febrile episodes, 57% lasted longer than four hours and 5% lasted longer than 12 hours. In 18 studies involving hypothermia for control of ICP in patients with TBI, therapeutic hypothermia (TH) (32–34°C) was effective in controlling ICP. In 11 prospective randomised clinical trials of severe TBI, moderate TH was at least as effective as most other treatments for intracranial hypertension (ICH).3 These alternative treatments included hyperventilation, mannitol and barbiturates. If used for ≤2 days, there was no evidence that moderate TH caused significant adverse events. Recommendations from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association for the management of cerebral and cerebellar infarction with swelling state that “temperature management is part of basic support and a normal temperature is reasonable” and “the effectiveness of the use of TH before brain swelling is not known”.4 Elevated ICP is a predictor of mortality in TBI and treatment of raised ICP has been shown to improve outcome and reduce mortality.1 In a study from Japan of 31 patients with severe head injury, ICP was decreased significantly at brain temperatures below 37°C, decreasing more sharply at temperatures 35–36°C.5 Sufficient cerebral perfusion pressure was maintained without cardiac dysfunction or oxygen debt. No differences in ICP reduction were observed at temperatures below 35°C. Therefore, 35–35.5°C seemed to be the optimal temperature at which to treat patients with severe TBI in this study.

Duration of cooling
As the secondary injury develops over the course of days, it is logical that tailored temperature management (TTM) should be applied in a similar timeframe. In a comparison of long-term

hypothermia (surface cooling for five days, n=108) versus short-term mild hypothermia (surface cooling for two days, n= 07) in patients with severe TBI, the longer-term cooling appeared more efficacious in terms of ICH control.6 A higher proportion of patients who received the longer-term cooling had favourable outcomes (43.5%) compared with the shorter-term cooling. The ICP rebounded significantly after rewarming in the short-term cooling group but not in the long-term cooling group. The rates of pneumonia and arrhythmia were comparable between the two groups. In a prospective study of prophylactic long-term normothermia (n=102), long-term, catheter-based normothermia significantly reduced fever burden in neurointensive care unit patients with severe cerebrovascular disease.7 It was not associated with increased major adverse events.

Optimal temperature target
In a predictive model of a dynamical system showing the physiological complexity of acute TBI in patients treated with a brain oxygen protocol, the boundary conditions or intolerance range for temperature was 34– 36°C.8 The temperature target of 35°C has the same effect on ICP as 33°C (hypothermia), though oxygen delivery is higher at 35°C and there is a reduced incidence of brain hypoperfusion/hypoxia. Physiological

changes induced by TTM are shown in Figure 2; although these changes provide opportunities for resuscitation, they may be detrimental to the patient’s outcome if not properly anticipated and managed.

Tailored temperature management methods
Cooling methods used in clinical practice are shown in Figure 3. Cold fluids have been associated with faster cooling but not a better outcome in cardiac arrest patients.9 Benefits include: maximal protective effects on the brain and other issues, myocardial infarct size reduction (if myocardial infarct is the cause of arrest), and early volume replacement, while potential risks are a decrease in cerebral and coronary perfusion pressure, pulmonary oedema and detrimental respiratory consequences and overcooling. Unintentional overcooling is common when ice packs and conventional cooling blankets are used in TH post-cardiac arrest.10 The cardio-circulatory side effects of overcooling include reduced heart rate, the consequences of which include arrhythmia, bradycardia, atrioventricular blocks and reduced blood pressure, increased vasopressors and ischaemia. The benefits of an advanced computerised surface on therapeutic endpoints compared with other cooling methods are shown in Table 2.

Post-cooling phase – withdrawal of tailored temperature management
Rebound hyperthermia in cardiac arrest patients who have undergone therapeutic hypothermia was a marker for increased mortality and worsened neurological morbidity.11 After moderate hypothermia,

rewarming exceeding the 37°C threshold was associated with a significant increase in the average cerebrovascular pressure reactivity index, in a retrospective analysis of 24 TBI patients with refractory ICH.12 This finding was indicative of temperature-dependent hyperaemic derangement of cerebrovascular reactivity. A slow rewarming rate meanwhile reduced the likelihood of a decrease in jugular venous oxygen haemoglobin saturation in patients scheduled for elective coronary artery bypass graft surgery.13 Together, these results support a strategy of controlled rewarming for TTM withdrawal.

Summary
• For patients with TBI, TTM is the most powerful mechanism of neuroprotection currently available.14
• Hypothermia is proven to have clinically beneficial effects in preventing secondary brain injury in patients who have experienced cardiac arrest and in neonates with hypoxic ischaemic injuries.14
• Cooling is an effective mechanism to reduce ICP in patients who do not respond to standard medications.14

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References

1. Sadaka F, Veremakis C, Therapeutic hypothermia for the management of intracranial hypertension in severe traumatic brain injury: a systematic review, Brain Injury, 2012;26:899–908.
2. Kilpatrick MM, Lowry DW, Firlik AD, et al., Hyperthermia in the neurosurgical intensive care unit, Neurosurgery, 2000;47:850– 5; discussion 5–6.
3. Schreckinger M, Marion DW, Contemporary management of traumatic intracranial hypertension: is there a role for therapeutic hypothermia?, Neurocrit Care, 2009;11:427–36.
4. Wijdicks EF, Sheth KN, Carter BS, et al., Recommendations for the management of cerebral and cerebellar infarction with swelling: a statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, Stroke, 2014;45:1222–38.
5. Tokutomi T, Morimoto K, Miyagi T, et al., Optimal temperature for the management of severe traumatic brain injury: effect of hypothermia on intracranial pressure, systemic and intracranial hemodynamics, and metabolism, Neurosurgery, 2003;52:102–11; discussion 11–2.
6. Jiang JY, Xu W, Li WP, et al., Effect of long-term mild hypothermia or short-term mild hypothermia on outcome of patients with severe traumatic brain injury, J Cereb Blood Flow Metab, 2006;26:771-6.
7. Broessner G, Beer R, Lackner P, et al., Prophylactic, endovascularly based, long-term normothermia in ICU patients with severe cerebrovascular disease: bicenter prospective, randomized trial, Stroke, 2009;40:e657–5.
8. Narotam PK, Morrison JF, Schmidt MD, Nathoo N, Physiological complexity of acute traumatic brain injury in patients treated with a brain oxygen protocol: utility of symbolic regression in predictive modeling of a dynamical system, J Neurotraum, 2014;31:630–41.
9. Cariou A, Sunde K, Cold fluids during cardiac arrest: faster cooling but not better outcome!, Intensive Care Medicine, 2014;40(12):1963–5.
10. Merchant RM, Abella BS, Peberdy MA, et al., Therapeutic hypothermia after cardiac arrest: unintentional overcooling is common using ice packs and conventional cooling blankets, Crit Care Med, 2006;34(12 Suppl):S490–4.
11. Winters SA, Wolf KH, Kettinger SA, et al., Assessment of risk factors for post-rewarming “rebound hyperthermia” in cardiac arrest patients undergoing therapeutic hypothermia, Resuscitation, 2013;84:1245–9.
12. Lavinio A, Timofeev I, Nortje J, et al., Cerebrovascular reactivity during hypothermia and rewarming, Br J Anaesth, 2007;99:237–44.
13. Kawahara F, Kadoi Y, Saito S, et al., Slow rewarming improves jugular venous oxygen saturation during rewarming, Acta Anaesthesiol Scand, 2003;47:419–24.
14. Choi HA, Badjatia N, Mayer SA, Hypothermia for acute brain injury–mechanisms and practical aspects, Nat Rev Neurol, 2012;8:214–22.
15. Perman SM, Goyal M, Neumar RW, et al., Clinical applications of targeted temperature management, Chest, 2014;145:386–93.
16. Holzer M, Targeted temperature management for comatose survivors of cardiac arrest, NEJM</I, 2010;363:1256–64.

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Article Information

Disclosure

Catherine Amey is an employee of Touch Medical Media, Reading, UK.

Review Process

This report is based on a presentation by Mauro Oddo; Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland. This was presented at a symposium sponsored by CR Bard Inc., held during the 28th Annual Congress of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine held in Berlin, Germany, on 5 October 2015. The report has not been subject to the journal’s usual peer-review process. A member of the editorial board reviewed the report before publication.

Correspondence

Catherine Amey, Touch Medical Media, 4 Reading Road, Pangbourne, Reading, West Berkshire, RG8 7LY, UK. E: catherine.amey@touchmedicalmedia.com

Support

The publication of this article was funded by CR Bard Inc. The views and opinions reported are those of the presenter and not necessarily those of CR Bard Inc.

Access

This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, adaptation and reproduction provided the original author(s) and source are given appropriate credit.

Received

8 June 2016

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