Summary.
Background: Intracerebral microdialysis (MD) was applied in patients with severe subarachnoid haemorrhage treated in a neurosurgical intensive care unit in order to explore their cerebral energy metabolism.
Method: Brain MD fluid levels of glucose, lactate and pyruvate were measured for 3 to 12 days in 20 patients and 2,635 hourly samples were analysed. The MD data were related to computerized tomography and clinical outcome, assessed by the Glasgow Outcome Scale.
Findings: The study showed that most patients who made a good recovery had a specific curve pattern when plotting the studied metabolites over time, characterised by a distinct decrease in MD-glucose and a parallel increase in both MD-lactate and pyruvate. Patients who had an unfavourable outcome lacked this distinct curve pattern and exhibited more irregular changes, including increased levels of both MD-glucose and lactate and low MD-pyruvate levels.
Interpretation: This exploratory study suggests that accumulation of interstitial lactate and pyruvate, together with decreasing levels of glucose is a favourable prognostic pattern presumably reflecting increased glucose metabolism. Such hyperglycolysis may be elicited in patients with recovery potential to cope with an extreme metabolic demand set in motion by a brain insult to restore brain cell homeostasis and integrity.
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Published online October 31, 2002
Acknowledgments The authors are grateful to Ms Karin Wettervik and Ms Monica Edberg for technical help. The study was supported by the Faculty of Medicine, Uppsala University, the Swedish MRC (proj no. 7888), The Selander Foundation, The Åhlén Foundation and The King Gustaf V and Queen Victoria's Foundation.
Correspondence: Dr. Lennart Persson, Department of Neurosurgery, Uppsala University Hospital, SE-751 85, UPPSALA, Sweden.
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Cesarini, K., Enblad, P., Ronne-Engström, E. et al. Early Cerebral Hyperglycolysis after Subarachnoid Haemorrhage Correlates with Favourable Outcome. Acta Neurochir (Wien) 144, 1121–1131 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-002-1011-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-002-1011-9