Abstract

It is well recognized that brain death starts to occur just 4-6 min after cardiac arrest, and few attempts at resuscitation succeed after 10 min of severe cerebral ischemia and anoxia. We sought to determine the therapeutic window of selective cerebral profound hypothermia of primates following severe cerebral ischemia in primates. Fourteen rhesus monkeys with severe cerebral ischemia were divided into four groups: normothermia (n = 3); profound hypothermia I (n = 4), with cooling initiated 10 min after ischemia; profound hypothermia II (n = 4), with cooling initiated 15 min after ischemia; and profound hypothermia III (n = 3), with cooling initiated 20 min after ischemia. Severe cerebral ischemia was induced by clamping both the internal and external carotid arteries, as well as the internal and external jugular veins. Profound cerebral hypothermia (15.8 degrees +/- 0.9 degrees C) was achieved and maintained for 60 min, and the animals were then re-warmed gradually. All four animals in hypothermia group I survived without any neurological deficits. Only 1 animal survived and 3 animals died in hypothermia group II. All 4 animals died in both hypothermia group III and the normothermia group. Neurological functions were normal in all surviving animals, and MRI scans showed no cerebral infarction in these animals. Microscopic examination showed no injured neurons in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex of the surviving animals, and showed that the heart, lung, liver, and kidneys were normal in these animals. Our data indicate that post-ischemic profound cerebral hypothermia provided significant cerebral protection with no systemic complications, and that the effective therapeutic window is more than 10 min, but less than 15 min, after severe cerebral ischemia.

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