A comparison of the effects of halothane, isoflurane, and pentobarbital anesthesia on intracranial pressure and cerebral edema formation following brain injury in rabbits.
To evaluate the impact of anesthetics on the evolution of a cerebral injury, 33 rabbits were subjected to a cryogenic brain lesion, followed by 10 h of anesthesia with 1 MAC halothane or isoflurane (n = 11 each) or with an equipotent dose of pentobarbital (n = 11). The lungs were ventilated to a PaCO2 = 30-35 mmHg with O2/air and normothermia was maintained. Intracranial pressure (ICP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), central venous pressure (CVP), arterial blood gases, and pH, osmolality, and other blood chemistries were recorded. Fifteen minutes after surgery, a left parietal injury was produced with liquid N2. A MAP greater than 70-75 mmHg was maintained throughout the study, using angiotensin II as needed, and CSF was removed if severe intracranial hypertension (ICP greater than 30 mmHg) threatened to reduce cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP = MAP-ICP) below 40 mmHg. 10 h after injury, the animals were killed, and edema formation assessed by: A) the wet weight of the two hemispheres; B) water content (%H2O; wet-dry weight) of the posterior aspect of the hemispheres; and C) specific gravity (SpGr) of tissue samples taken adjacent to and distant from the lesion. Animals given pentobarbital had higher MAP's until 3 h after the lesion had been induced. There were no subsequent intergroup differences in MAP, and no differences at any time in CVP, PaO2, PaCO2, pH, total fluids, or urine output. ICP increased in all animals, but with no significant intergroup differences (ICP in halothane animals was numerically lower). There were no clear differences in the incidence of ventricular drainage (1 halothane, 5 isoflurane, 3 pentobarbital; P = 0.16). In spite of CSF drainage and angiotensin, CPP[1]References
- A comparison of the effects of halothane, isoflurane, and pentobarbital anesthesia on intracranial pressure and cerebral edema formation following brain injury in rabbits. Kaieda, R., Todd, M.M., Weeks, J.B., Warner, D.S. Anesthesiology (1989) [Pubmed]
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