Title: Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy and Strategies for Neuroprotection
1Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy and Strategies
for Neuroprotection
-
- Sanjay Akangire, MD, Archana Kulkarni, MD,
Mubariz Naqvi, MD - Department of Pediatrics
- Texas Tech University Health Science center,
- Amarillo, TX
2Background
- Perinatal Hypoxic Ischemic compromise is the
most common sequence leading to severe
neurological deficit in children referred to as
cerebral palsy (CP) - Currently the management is supportive and
despite improvement in perinatal practice the
incidence of CP has remained unchanged - Novel and exciting strategies to prevent the
ongoing injury are being clinically evaluated to
offer neuroprotection and to ameliorate the
ongoing brain injury
3Case Presentation
- Birth History
- Baby boy P was born at 38 weeks gestation
- to a 20 year old G1P1Ab0 Caucasian mother
- Baby was born in a regional hospital and was
transferred to NICU at 6 hrs of life - Baby was born by spontaneous vaginal delivery
under epidural anesthesia - There were late decelerations on fetal monitor
and rupture of membranes occurred 14hrs prior to
delivery
4Case Presentation
- Hospital course at birth
- Personnel at regional hospital attended the
delivery, positive pressure ventilation,
intubation and chest compressions were done in
the delivery room - Apgar scores- 0/4/4, cord blood pH- 6.6
- The baby was transferred to NICU for neonatal
depression and stage 3 HIE and further management - Baby was placed on mechanical ventilator by the
transport team
5Case Presentation
- Hospital course at NICU
- Physical examination
- Birth weight-3220gm
- FOC- 34cm
- Length-51cm
- Ballard-39 weeks AGA
- Vitals- T-98.2, HR- 185, R-35/min, O2 sat- 97,
BP- RA-82/63,LL-94/59,RL-71/57 , LA 81/60
6Case Presentation
- Positive findings
- Obtunded, Hypotonic and had agonal breathing.
- HEENT- pupils fixed and dilated
- Chest- Air entry equal bilaterally, agonal
respirations and gasping seen at intervals - Abdomen- liver 1cm below right costal margin
- Neurological- Jittery at intervals, no tone, no
spontaneous movement, no suck and gag response
was noted, clonus greater than 10 beats per
second was present - Musculoskeletal system- Small pilonidal dimple,
no hip click, bruising on left forearm and right
foot with edema
7Case Presentation
- Impression
- Term AGA male
- Neonatal depression
- Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy stage 3
- Severe metabolic acidosis
- Respiratory distress secondary to neonatal
depression - Seizures
8Case Presentation
- Health care maintenance-
- Placement of UVC
- Placed on cooling blanket for total body cooling
on DOL1 at 6.5 hrs of age to maintain core
temperature between 32 to 34 degrees Celsius for
72 hours - IV fluid 10 glucose in water at 60cc/kg
- 200 mg/kg of calcium gluconate
- Also received TPN on DOL 3
9Case Presentation
- Hospital course
- Respiratory system
- CBG at birth- pH 6.6, BE- -16, CBG on admission
to NICU pH-7.346, PCO2- 18.8, PO2-51, Hc03-10.3
on mechanical ventilation - Sodium bicarbonate was given to correct
- acidosis.
10CXR Consistent with ARDS, Minimal bibasilar
infiltrates, ET tube in place
11Case Presentation
- Neurological system-
- EEG- Findings compatible with flat tracing and
indicative of electro cerebral hypoactivity - severe burst suppression pattern
- Ultrasound of head- Mild cerebral edema noted
- Baby had seizures within 4 hours of birth and was
treated with Phenobarbital with 40mg/kg loading
dose. Phenobarbital level was 45mg/dl
12Case Presentation
- Metabolic and Renal system-
- Severe metabolic acidosis on admission-
Bicarbonate of 10.3, Corrected by giving NaHco3 - Creatinine level was 1.2 mg/dl and maximum BUN
was 10mg/dl, frank hematuria was noticed - Hyperkalemia- Potassium was 8.2, treated with
insulin and glucose therapy. - Baby had hyponatremia and hypochloremia- Sodium
125mmol/l, Chloride- 73 mmol/l, Hypocalcemia-
Calcium-6.7 mg/dl - Lactic acid level-19.4 mmol/l (0.5-2.2)
13Case Presentation
- Infectious disease-
- Started on Ampicillin and Gentamicin for
- suspected sepsis
- White count on admission was 46.1, with
- S53,B6,L29,M7,E1, Platelet count 241,000,
- CRP- 4.65
- Blood culture was negative
- GI system-
- Baby was kept NPO
-
14Case Presentation
- Hematological system
- DIC was treated with Fresh frozen plasma
- D-dimer 4592 (Nlt310ng/ml)
- Fibrinogen- 279 (N210-482 mg/dl)
- PT- 19.6 (9.7-13.3 seconds) INR- 1.57
- PTT- 45.8 (N27.5-36.3)
- Lowest platelet count was 116,000
- Cardiovascular System
- Baby had hypotension and dopamine was started for
inotropic support
15Case Presentation
- Parents and Family
- Single parent family
- Several parent physician meetings were held and
detailed information regarding clinical status
was provided. - Mother was counseled regarding hypothermia
treatment and an informed consent was obtained.
16Blue cooling blanket
17 Frequency, mortality and morbidity
- US - rare
- 1-2 per 1000 live births
- Developing countries incidence is higher due
to lack of advanced perinatal and neonatal care - In severe HIE, mortality is 50
- 80 of the infants with severe HIE have long term
disability - 10-20- moderate disability
- 10 - normal
- Long term sequelae
- Mental retardation , Seizures, Cerebral palsy
18Demographic influence
- There is no ethnic or gender predilection
- Age
- seen in the newborn period
- most infants are term
- disease manifests at birth or within few hours
19Clinical Manifestations and Course
- Mild HIE
- Poor feeding, irritability, excessive crying or
lethargy - Muscle tone may be increased and deep tendon
reflexes may be brisk - By 3-4 days the CNS examination may be
- normal
20Clinical Manifestations and Course (cont)
- Moderate HIE
- Lethargy, hypotonia, decreased tendon reflexes
- Grasp, Moro and sucking response are sluggish
- Periodic apnea
- Seizures
- Full recovery within 2-3 weeks
- An initial period of well-being followed by a
period of deterioration is suggestive of
reperfusion injury
21Clinical Manifestations and Course (cont)
- Severe HIE
- Stupor, coma, no response to physical stimulus
- Irregular breathing, ventilatory assistance is
- required
- Generalized hypotonia, inactivity and absent
reflexes - Neonatal reflexes (sucking, swallowing, grasp
and Moro) are absent - Disturbance of ocular motions, skewed deviation
of the eyes, nystagmus
22Clinical Manifestations and Course (cont)
- Pupils may be fixed and dilated, poorly reactive
to light - Seizures may occur early and are intractable
- As time progresses seizures subside, EEG becomes
isoelectric (Burst suppression pattern) - Wakefulness deteriorate, fontanelle bulge
suggesting increasing cerebral edema - Irregularities of the heart rate and BP are
common - Death occurs commonly due to cardio respiratory
failure
23Clinical Manifestations and Course (cont)
- Sarnats Stages of perinatal ischemic brain
injury
24Pathogenesis
- Impaired cerebral blood flow (CBF) is the
dominant pathogenic mechanism - Secondary to interruption in placental blood flow
and gas exchange - Severe fetal acidemia ensues fetal umbilical
artery pH 7.0 -
25Pathogenesis (cont)
- Acute injury at cellular level (depletion of
oxygen) - Oxidative phosphorylation
- Anaerobic metabolism
- Decreased ATP
- Increased lactic acid level
- Failure of transcellular ion pump
- Intracellular accumulation of Na , Ca , H2O
- Cytotoxic edema
26Membrane Depolarization
- Release of excitatory amino acids (glutamate)
from the axon terminals - Increases influx of sodium and calcium in the
cell - Accumulation of free fatty acids in the cytoplasm
- Peroxidation of free fatty acids
- Mitochondrial release
- Prostaglandins
- Xanthines
- Uric acid
- Nitric oxide
- Further increase in influx of calcium
27Factors associated with cell death
- Energy failure
- Acidosis
- Glutamate release
- Intracellular calcium
- Lipid peroxidation
- Nitric oxide toxicity
28Perlman et al Intervention strategies for
neonatal hypoxic-ischemic cerebral injury, Clin
Ther. 2006 Sep28(9)1353-65
29Delayed Brain Damage
- After resuscitation in utero or in the post
natal period cerebral oxygenation and perfusion
is restored - pH and cardiorespiratory status normalizes
- Intracellular phosphorus metabolism and pH also
normalize - Cerebral energy failure returns in 6-48hrs known
as the second phase of injury - Characterized by decrease in phosphocreatine
-inorganic phosphate ratio (spectrophotometer
MRI) - In human subjects the severity of second energy
failure has strong correlation with adverse
neurodevelopmental outcome at 1 and 4 years of age
30Mechanism of secondary energy failure
- Accumulation of cytosolic calcium
- Calcium is an intracellular second messenger with
low concentration in normal physiological state - During hypoxic ischemia calcium influx in
neuronal cells occur, due to increase in NMDA and
glutamate - Calcium efflux is interrupted by cell membrane
energy failure - Calcium is also released into the cytoplasm by
mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum - Intracellular calcium increases formation of
oxygen free radicals via xanthine and
prostaglandin synthesis - Cytosolic calcium has detrimental effect on
neuronal cells leading to irreversible brain
damage
31Mechanism of secondary energy failure
- Excitatory neurotransmitter release
- Glutamic acid is a major excitatory amino acid
- During H-I glutamate release increases
- Promotes intracellular entry of calcium leading
to cell death
32Mechanism of secondary energy failure
- Formation of free radicals
- Oxygen free radicals
- H-I increases oxygen free radicals as byproducts
of xanthine and prostaglandins - Cell membrane is destroyed by the attack on PUFA
component of cell membrane - Nitric oxide
- Iron
- H-I release free ferric iron which converts into
ferrous form leads to free radical injury
NOS
Citrulline
NO
L Arginine
33Mechanism of secondary energy failure
- Inflammatory mediators
- Play a critical role in pathogenesis of HIE
- Interleukin-1B, TNF-alpha and PAF are expressed
within 1-4 hrs of HIE - Neutrophil invasion of the area of infarction
occurs - Inflammatory cytokines induce the release of NOS
and EAA - Cytokines exert both beneficial and deleterious
effect after ischemia
34Mechanism of secondary energy failure
- Neuronal cell necrosis
- Cell swelling
- Disruption of cytoplasmic organelles
- Loss of membrane integrity
- Lysis of neuronal cells
- Activation of inflammatory process
35Mechanism of secondary energy failure
- Apoptosis
- Cell shrinkage
- Nuclear pyknosis
- Chromatin condensation
- Genomic fragmentation without inflammatory
response
36Strategies to prevent ongoing injury after
hypoxic ischemia
- Early identification of infants at highest risk
- Supportive care to facilitate adequate perfusion
and nutrients to the brain - Consideration of interventions to ameliorate the
process of ongoing brain injury - Window of opportunity is short between 2-6 hrs
- Prompt identification therefore is crucial
37Strategies to prevent ongoing injury after
hypoxic ischemia
- Constellation of findings in highest risk
infants - Evidence of sentinel events during labor, such as
abnormal fetal heart patterns - Severe neonatal depression with low extended
Apgar score lt5 after 5 min - Need for active resuscitation in the delivery
room such as intubation, chest compression and
administration of epinephrine - Severe fetal acidemia, umbilical artery pH lt7
and/or base deficit of gt16meq/liter - Early abnormal neurological examination and
abnormal EEG are a robust evidence for severe HIE
38Perlman et al Intervention strategies for
neonatal hypoxic-ischemic cerebral injury, Clin
Ther. 2006 Sep28(9)1353-65
39Strategies for Neuroprotection
- Ventilation
- Maintain PaCO2 ,and PaO 2 within normal range
- Perfusion
- Promptly treat hypotension
- Avoid hypertension
- Maintain MAP at 50mm of Hg
- Fluid status
- Initial fluid restriction
- Replace only insensible water loss
- Maintain fluid restriction
- Follow daily weights and serum sodium to adjust
fluid therapy
40Strategies for Neuroprotection
- Blood glucose
- Maintain blood glucose within normal range
between 50mg/dl to 150mg/dl - Avoid hypoglycemia
- Seizures
- Treat clinical seizures with EEG evidence
- Potential role of prophylactic Phenobarbital with
loading dose of 40mg/kg - Electrolyte imbalance
- Monitor serum electrolytes calcium and magnesium
41Strategies of Neuroprotection
- Control of blood glucose concentration
- Both hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia accentuate
brain damage - In adults hyperglycemia is definitely proven to
be neurotoxic, in neonates evidence is not as
clear - Hypoglycemia secondary to hyperinsulinemia is at
higher risk for neuronal damage - Hypoglycemia due to fasting may be beneficial
secondary to release of ketone bodies - Blood glucose to be maintained in normoglycemic
range (50-150mg/dl)
42Strategies for Neuroprotection
- Control of Seizures
- HIE is the most common cause of early onset
neonatal seizures - Seizures are due to HIE, but seizure activity may
contribute to ongoing neuronal injury - Repetitive seizures disturb brain growth and may
lead to permanent epileptic disorders - Role of prophylactic phenobarbital therapy has
some beneficial impact on neuroprotection
43Potential Neuroprotective strategies aimed at
ameliorating secondary brain injury
- Hypothermia
- Modest systemic or selective cooling of the brain
as little by 2-4 degrees reduces the extent of
tissue injury both in experimental animals and
human trials
44Hypothermia
- Potential mechanism of neuroprotection
- Decreases cerebral metabolism and inhibits
glutamate release - Preservation of high energy phosphorylation
- Decrease in intracellular acidosis and lactic
acid accumulation - Preservation of endogenous antioxidants and
catecholamines - Decrease in NO production
45Hypothermia
- Potential mechanism of neuroprotection contd
- Prevention of protein kinase inhibition
- Reduction of leukotriene production
- Prevention of blood brain barrier disruption
- Decrease in brain edema
- Inhibition of apoptosis
46Hypothermia
- Factors to be considered for effective
hypothermia - The window of opportunity lies within 6 hrs of
occurrence of HIE - Recommended duration of therapy is 24-72 hrs
- Degree of hypothermia for beneficial effect is
32-34 degree C - Two recommended methods of cooling
- Selective head cooling
- Total body cooling
47Hypothermia
- Adverse effects of hypothermia
- Hypoglycemia
- Reduction of myocardial contractility and
arrhythmias and hypotension - Ventilation perfusion mismatch
- Increased blood viscosity and bleeding diasthesis
with thrombocytopenia - Acid base and electrolyte imbalance
- Increased risk of sepsis
48Hypothermia
- Outcome of Hypothermia
- Gluckman study (Australia)
- The selective head cooling method
- Hypothermia was beneficial in reducing death and
disability in infants with moderate H-I - No positive effect with infants with severe H-I
- Shankaran NICHD study (USA)
- Total body hypothermia was beneficial in both
moderate and severe hypoxic ischemia in reducing
death and disability in term infants with HIE
49Strategies for other Neuroprotective modalities
- Oxygen free radical inhibitors and scavengers
- Superoxide dismutase
- Allopurinol inhibitior of xanthine production
- Desferoxamine chelating agent
- Lazeroid non glucocorticoids to prevent iron
dependent lipid peroxidation - Excitatory amino acid inhibitors
- Glutamate and NMDA inhibitors
- Magnesium sulphate
- PCP
- Dextromethorphan and ketamine
50Strategies for other Neuroprotective modalities
- Prevention of Nitric oxide formation
- NOs inhibitors
- Calcium channel blockers
- Flunararizin and Nicardopine
- Miscellaneous agents PAF inhibitors, growth
factors and IGF-I - All modalities are under investigation
51Parental support
- Hypoxic ischemic events can lead to both
immediate and long-term sequelae in a neonate - The parents go through lot of anguish, grief
response and stress - Communication with parents should be conducted
in simple terminology describing the clinical
events and long-term outcome - The information should be precise, transparent,
punctuated with empathy, compassion and a ray of
hope
52Medicolegal implications
- Birth asphyxia, birth injury and perinatal
asphyxia are used incorrectly to describe HIE - Birth injury implies to neonatal injuries
accruing during the process of birth e.g.
brachial plexus injury, fracture of clavicles and
forceps induced damage to soft tissues - Birth asphyxia is similar to birth injury in
which asphyxia occurs during the first and second
stage of labor - Perinatal asphyxia signifies the occurrence
during any time in the perinatal period from
conception to first month of life
53American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and American
College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG)
- The correct terminology for documentation is
Hypoxic ischemia or neonatal depression - Terms such as Birth asphyxia and/or
neonatal asphyxia are to be avoided -
54Implications for Clinical PracticeNational
Institute of Child Health and Human Development
- Therapeutic hypothermia is an evolving therapy,
long term efficacy is still unknown - Perinatal HIE is not a single disease from a
single cause - Long term follow up is extremely important
- Therapeutic hypothermia if offered in clinical
practice should be used under published
guidelines - Role of EEG and MRI for prognostic assessment to
be validated
55Implications for Clinical PracticeNational
Institute of Child Health and Human Development
- Future trials should be linked with current
trials - National and international registries should be
established - The formation of international interest groups is
highly recommended similar to the pediatric
oncology group - Institution offering hypothermia in non research
settings also need to document the clinical data
and ensure long term follow up and submit
information to registries
56Conclusion
- HIE is a devastating event
- It has great impact on the neonate and his family
- Recent research has led to a better understanding
of this ongoing brain compromise - Early identification of infants with higher risk
for ongoing brain injury is very critical - This period is known as window of opportunity
should facilitate the implication of more
specific pharmacological and non-pharmacological
intervention such as hypothermia for
neuroprotection
57Bibliography
- Calvert JW, Zhang JH. Pathophysiology of an
Hypoxic-ischemic insult during perinatal period,
2005, Neurological research, 27 246-260 - Perlman JM. Intervention strategies for Neonatal
hypoxic ischemic cerebral injury, 2006, Clinical
Therapeutics, 28,9 1353-1365 - Shankaran S, Laptook AR, NICHD research network.
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2005, N Eng Journal of Medicine, 353 1574-1584 - Perlman JM. Can asphyxiated infant at risk for
neonatal seizures be rapidly identified by
current high risk markers, 1996, Pediatrics, 97
456-462 - Gunn AJ, Gunn TR. Neuroprotection with prolonged
head cooling started before post ischemic
seizures in fetal sheep, 1998, Pediatrics, 102
1098-1106 - Salhab WA. Initial hypoglycemia and neonatal
brain injury in term infants with severe fetal
acidemia, Pediatrics, 2004, 114 361-366
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