Anders Hagen Jarmund , Steinar Kristiansen , Martin Leth-Olsen , Christina Vogt , Ingunn Nervik , Hans Torp , Erik Waage Nielsen , Siri Ann Nyrnes
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
Fat embolism syndrome and cerebral fat emboli are rare yet serious conditions arising from systemic distribution of bone marrow emboli. Emboli are known to produce high-intensity transient signals (HITS) in a Doppler signal. We hypothesized that both intramedullary nailing in pigs and median sternotomy in human infants cause bone marrow release, that some of these cause cerebral emboli, and that these were detectable by a new cerebral doppler ultrasound monitoring system (NeoDoppler). We also aimed to describe the intensity of HITS generated during these procedures.
Methods
Specific pathogen-free Norwegian landrace pigs were allocated to either bilateral femoral nailing or injection of autologous bone marrow (positive controls). Testing was carried out under continuous Doppler monitoring. Presence of cerebral emboli was confirmed with histology. NeoDoppler data from infants undergoing sternotomy prior to cardiac surgery were investigated for comparison.
Results
Eleven of twelve pigs were monitored with cerebral Doppler ultrasound during femoral surgery. HITS were seen in five (45%). Brain biopsies demonstrated bone marrow emboli in 11 of the 12 (92%). Four positive control pigs received intraarterial injections of bone marrow, saline, or contrast, and strong HITS were detected in all pigs (100%). Median sternotomy in eight human infants was associated with a significant increase in embolic burden; the HITS intensity was lower than HITS in pigs.
Conclusion
High-frequency cerebral Doppler ultrasound is a valuable tool for perioperative monitoring that can detect emboli in real-time, but sensitivity and specificity for bone marrow emboli may be limited and size-dependent.
期刊介绍:
Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology is the official journal of the World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology. The journal publishes original contributions that demonstrate a novel application of an existing ultrasound technology in clinical diagnostic, interventional and therapeutic applications, new and improved clinical techniques, the physics, engineering and technology of ultrasound in medicine and biology, and the interactions between ultrasound and biological systems, including bioeffects. Papers that simply utilize standard diagnostic ultrasound as a measuring tool will be considered out of scope. Extended critical reviews of subjects of contemporary interest in the field are also published, in addition to occasional editorial articles, clinical and technical notes, book reviews, letters to the editor and a calendar of forthcoming meetings. It is the aim of the journal fully to meet the information and publication requirements of the clinicians, scientists, engineers and other professionals who constitute the biomedical ultrasonic community.