Journal of Applied Physiology AJP: Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 102: 1329-1340, 2007. First published December 14, 2006; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00805.2006
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A theoretical model of selective cooling using intracarotid cold saline infusion in the human brain

Angelos-Aristeidis Konstas,1,* Matthew A. Neimark,2,* Andrew F. Laine,1,2 and John Pile-Spellman1

Departments of 1Radiology and 2Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, New York

Submitted 20 July 2006 ; accepted in final form 12 December 2006

A three-dimensional mathematical model was developed to examine the transient and steady-state temperature distribution in the human brain during selective brain cooling (SBC) by unilateral intracarotid freezing-cold saline infusion. To determine the combined effect of hemodilution and hypothermia from the cold saline infusion, data from studies investigating the effect of these two parameters on cerebral blood flow (CBF) were pooled, and an analytic expression describing the combined effect of the two factors was derived. The Pennes bioheat equation used the thermal properties of the different cranial layers and the effect of cold saline infusion on CBF to propagate the evolution of brain temperature. A healthy brain and a brain with stroke (ischemic core and penumbra) were modeled. CBF and metabolic rate data were reduced to simulate the core and penumbra. Simulations using different saline flow rates were performed. The results suggested that a flow rate of 30 ml/min is sufficient to induce moderate hypothermia within 10 min in the ipsilateral hemisphere. The brain with stroke cooled to lower temperatures than the healthy brain, mainly because the stroke limited the total intracarotid blood flow. Gray matter cooled twice as fast as white matter. The continuously falling hematocrit was the main time-limiting factor, restricting the SBC to a maximum of 3 h. The study demonstrated that SBC by intracarotid saline infusion is feasible in humans and may be the fastest method of hypothermia induction.

therapeutic hypothermia; ischemic stroke; spatial and temporal brain temperature distributions



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. A. Neimark, Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia Univ., New York, New York 10027 (e-mail: man2003{at}columbia.edu)




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