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Title: Altered cardiovascular responses to tracheal intubation in patients with complete spinal cord injury: relation to time course and affected level. Author: Yoo KY, Jeong CW, Kim SJ, Jeong ST, Kwak SH, Shin MH, Lee J. Journal: Br J Anaesth; 2010 Dec; 105(6):753-9. PubMed ID: 20923869. Abstract: BACKGROUND: We determined cardiovascular responses to tracheal intubation in relation to the time since injury in patients with different levels of spinal cord injury. METHODS: Two hundred and fourteen patients with complete cord injury were studied. They were either quadriplegics (>C7, n=71) or paraplegics (<T5, n=143), and were subdivided into six groups each according to the time since injury: <4 week (acute), 4 week-1 yr, 1-5, 5-10, 10-20, and >20 yr. Twenty patients with no cord injury served as controls. Systolic arterial pressure (SAP), heart rate (HR), and plasma catecholamine concentrations were determined. RESULTS: Intubation did not affect SAP in the quadriplegics regardless of the time post-injury, but it significantly increased SAP in all paraplegics. Moreover, the pressor response was enhanced in the paraplegics who were 10 yr or more since injury (P<0.05). HR increased significantly in all groups; the magnitude of the increase was less only in acute quadriplegics compared with controls. Plasma concentrations of norepinephrine increased in every group except for the quadriplegics within 4 weeks of injury. The maximum increases in SAP, HR, and norepinephrine from awake baseline values were smaller in the quadriplegics than in the paraplegics (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: The cardiovascular and catecholamine responses to intubation change as a function of the time elapsed and the level of the cord injury. In this study, the pressor response to tracheal intubation was abolished in the quadriplegics but not in paraplegics; indeed, it was enhanced at 10 yr or more since injury in this group.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]