Investigation of Cerebral Hemodynamics and Oxygenation Relationships Under Sedation in Children: ICHOR USC
儿童镇静状态下脑血流动力学和氧合关系的调查:ICHOR USC
基本信息
- 批准号:10216102
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 18.58万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2021
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2021-09-10 至 2026-08-31
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:1 year old8 year oldAcuteAddressAdultAerobicAffectAgeAnesthesia proceduresAnestheticsAnimalsApoptosisBlood flowBrainBrain HypoxiaBrain Hypoxia-IschemiaBrain InjuriesCalciumCell physiologyCerebrovascular CirculationCerebrumCharacteristicsChemicalsChildChildhoodClinicalCognitiveCohort StudiesCoupledCouplingCritical CareDendritesDiagnosisDiagnosticDiseaseEnrollmentEquipoiseExhibitsExposure toFutureGoalsHypoxiaImageImpairmentIndividual DifferencesInfantInjuryInvestigationIon ChannelKnowledgeLeadLearningLinkLiquid substanceMRI ScansMagnetic Resonance ImagingMeasurementMeasuresMediatingMedicalMetabolicMetabolismNational Heart, Lung, and Blood InstituteNeuronsNeurotoxinsOutcomeOxygenPatient CarePatientsPharmaceutical PreparationsPilot ProjectsPropofolProviderRandomizedRegulationReportingResearchResearch DesignResearch Project GrantsRiskScanningSedation procedureTechniquesTestingTranslational ResearchTraumatic Brain Injuryadverse outcomeaxon injurybehavioral outcomebrain metabolismcareercerebral hemodynamicscerebral oxygenationclinical practicecognitive performancecohortcytotoxicdesignhemodynamicsimage processingimprovedmetabolomicsneonatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injuryneurite growthneurodevelopmentneuroimagingneurotoxicitypediatric patientspotential biomarkerpredictive markerpreferencepreventrelating to nervous systemresponsesedativesevofluraneskillstreatment response
项目摘要
Project Summary
The broad objective of this research is to use neuroimaging to understand the hemodynamic responses
to anesthesia and sedation. Anesthesia and sedation, commonly used in pediatric patients, cause
profound and rapid changes in cerebral blood flow and metabolism. Under normal conditions in
adults, these changes are tightly coupled to one another to protect the brain from hypoxia and
ischemia. However, the extent to which flow and metabolism are coupled during anesthesia and
sedation in pediatric patients is unknown. The aims of this project are (1) to quantify the
hemodynamic and metabolic responses to anesthesia in infants, and (2) to compare those responses
during the administration of specific anesthetics in infants with differing disease states that may
make them more vulnerable to the uncoupling of flow from metabolism. If our hypotheses are borne
out and infants are particularly vulnerable to this uncoupling, our findings will lead to future
studies to assess hemodynamic responses as potential biomarkers that predict and mediate adverse
outcomes in infants exposed to anesthesia. Therefore, this project is relevant to the NHLBI's
strategic objective to identify factors that account for individual differences in pathobiology and
treatment response.
This project requires an opportunity for making simultaneous flow and metabolism measurements in
anesthetized infants. Clinical MR imaging provides this opportunity. Therefore, we will enroll into
a Naturalistic Cohort Study 120 infants younger than 1 year of age who require a clinical MRI scan,
half receiving anesthesia and half not. Enrolled infants will be imaged with MRI sequences that
measure cerebral blood flow and metabolism. In addition, we will enroll 30 additional infants of
the same age into a Pilot Randomized Comparator Trial (RCT), in which the infants will be
randomized to receive either propofol or sevoflurane anesthesia. Randomization will dramatically
reduce potential confounding of diseases and anesthetic agents present in the naturalistic study.
Learning to design RCTs (Goal 1) is addressed with didactics and a practicum to advance my
translational research skills. This project requires my learning how anesthetics and sedatives
alter hemodynamics and fluid dynamics (Goal 2) and how the known and putative mechanisms of
neurotoxicity and flow-metabolism uncoupling affect the developing brain (Goal 3). This project and
my research career will help infants who require anesthesia or sedation. It creates a paradigm in
which the hemodynamic response to anesthesia can be explored safely in pediatric critical care
patients. It requires the combination of MRI and image processing know-how - skills that I already
have - with a deeper understanding of the pathophysiological consequences of altered hemodynamic
responses to anesthesia in infants. It also requires that I develop an improved ability to design
research projects that fit within a rigorous and narrow clinical opportunity - skills that I will
gain with this K25 support.
项目摘要
这项研究的主要目的是利用神经影像学来了解血流动力学反应
麻醉和镇静通常用于儿科患者的麻醉和镇静,
脑血流量和代谢的深刻而迅速的变化。在正常情况下,
在成年人中,这些变化相互紧密耦合,以保护大脑免受缺氧,
缺血然而,在麻醉期间血流和代谢耦合的程度,
儿科患者的镇静作用尚不清楚。本项目的目的是(1)量化
婴儿对麻醉的血流动力学和代谢反应,以及(2)比较这些反应
在对具有不同疾病状态的婴儿施用特定麻醉剂期间,
使它们更容易受到能量流与新陈代谢分离的影响。如果我们的假设成立
婴儿特别容易受到这种分离的影响,我们的研究结果将导致未来
评估血流动力学反应作为预测和介导不良反应的潜在生物标志物的研究
暴露于麻醉的婴儿的结局。因此,该项目与NHLBI的
战略目标是确定导致病理生物学个体差异的因素,
治疗反应。
该项目需要一个机会,使同时流动和代谢测量,
麻醉的婴儿临床MR成像提供了这个机会。因此,我们将报名参加
一项自然队列研究,120名1岁以下需要临床MRI扫描的婴儿,
一半接受麻醉一半不接受入组婴儿将接受MRI序列成像,
测量脑血流量和新陈代谢。此外,我们还将招募30名婴儿,
将相同年龄的婴儿纳入一项初步随机对照试验(RCT),
随机接受丙泊酚或七氟烷麻醉。随机化将极大地
减少自然主义研究中存在的疾病和麻醉剂的潜在混淆。
学习设计随机对照试验(目标1)是解决与教学法和实习,以提高我的
翻译研究技能。这个项目要求我学习麻醉剂和镇静剂
改变血液动力学和流体动力学(目标2)以及已知和假定的
神经毒性和血流代谢解偶联影响发育中的大脑(目标3)。这个项目和
我的研究生涯将帮助需要麻醉或镇静的婴儿。它创造了一个范例,
在儿科重症监护中可以安全地探索麻醉的血流动力学反应
患者它需要结合MRI和图像处理技术,我已经
具有-对血流动力学改变的病理生理学后果有更深入的了解
婴儿对麻醉的反应。它还要求我提高设计能力,
适合严格和狭窄的临床机会的研究项目-我将
在K25的支持下。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Matthew Borzage其他文献
Matthew Borzage的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Matthew Borzage', 18)}}的其他基金
Effect of diabetes and AD pathology on brain imaging and cognition in Latino adults
糖尿病和 AD 病理学对拉丁裔成年人脑成像和认知的影响
- 批准号:
10503554 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 18.58万 - 项目类别:
Investigation of Cerebral Hemodynamics and Oxygenation Relationships Under Sedation in Children: ICHOR USC
儿童镇静状态下脑血流动力学和氧合关系的调查:ICHOR USC
- 批准号:
10687918 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 18.58万 - 项目类别:
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