Acute Changes in Cerebral Oxygenation and Cerebral Blood Volume in Preterm Infants During Surfactant Treatment
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Georg Thieme Verlag KG in Neuropediatrics
- Vol. 23 (03) , 126-130
- https://doi.org/10.1055/s-2008-1071327
Abstract
Following administration of surfactant a marked depression in aEEG activity occurs for about 10 minutes; the mechanism of this depression is unknown. In view of this, twenty-nine preterm infants were investigated with near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to evaluate rapid changes in total cerebral haemoglobin concentration and cerebral oxyhaemoglobin concentration during rescue treatment with natural surfactant. During surfactant instillation there was a short-lasting hypoxaemia as demonstrated by pulseoximetry as well as a considerable fall in arterial blood pressure. With NIRS, tissue hypoxia was demonstrated by a drop in cerebral oxyhaemoglobin concentration. The marked drop in arterial blood pressure occurring immediately following surfactant was not matched by a drop in total cerebral haemoglobin concentration. This suggests that cerebral blood volume and hence cerebral blood flow was maintained. In the following minutes there was an improvement in cerebral oxygenation as indicated by the rise in cerebral oxyhaemoglobin concentration in nearly all the infants. The present study clearly suggests a hyperaemic hyperoxic state in the brain after surfactant rescue treatment and does not explain the transient EEG depression after surfactant treatment as a result of cerebral ischaemia/hypoxia.Keywords
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