Stroke, Vol 15, 553-557, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
S Javaheri, A Clendening, N Papadakis and JS Brody
We measured brain surface pH and cisternal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
acid-base variables in Na-pentobarbital anesthetized dogs during KCl
induced cardiac arrest. Electrocardiographically, an agonal rhythm occurred
within seconds, presumably resulting in rapid fall in cerebral blood flow.
The mean arterial blood pressure fell from 125 +/- 22 (mean +/- 1 SD) to 35
+/- 28 mm Hg at 30 seconds and to 19 +/- 3 mm Hg at 60 seconds after KCl
injection. The mean brain surface pH (n = 8) dropped abruptly from 7.30 to
6.80 within 3 minutes after induction of cardiac arrest. Changes in
cisternal CSF pH, however, occurred slowly with the mean pH falling from
7.33 to 7.27 at 4 minutes and to 6.99 at 10 minutes after induction of
cardiac arrest. The fall in cisternal CSF pH was due to a rise in CSF
concentration of organic acids as well as a rise in CSF Pco2; the mean
cisternal CSF [HCO3-] fell 3.6 mEq/l while the mean cisternal CSF lactate
concentration and the mean CSF Pco2 rose, respectively, 2.1 mEq/l and 37.8
mm Hg 10 minutes after induction of cardiac arrest. We conclude that during
acute ischemic anoxia gross pH disequilibria develop between brain
extracellular fluid and cisternal CSF; analyses of the latter fluid provide
unreliable information about brain metabolic status and its acid-base
balance even up to ten minutes after induction of cardiac arrest.
ARTICLES
PH changes on the surface of brain and in cisternal fluid in dogs in cardiac arrest
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