Objective: To investigate whether ventilatory management using a temperature-corrected (pH-stat) or uncorrected (alpha-stat) blood gas analysis strategy improves brain tissue oxygen tension (PbrO(2)) in children prophylactically treated with moderate hypothermia for traumatic brain injury.
Design, setting and participants: Double crossover study conducted in the intensive care unit of a tertiary children's hospital. Nine children aged 3-14 years with severe traumatic brain injury were randomly allocated twice to a 6-hour period of either alpha- or pH-stat management while being kept hypothermic at 32.5°C.
Main outcome measures: PbrO(2), intracranial pressure (ICP) and PbrO(2)/PaO(2).
Results: PbrO(2) was significantly higher during pH-stat management (alpha-stat, 23.2mmHg [95% CI, 22.4- 24.0mmHg] v pH-stat, 28.7mmHg [95% CI, 27.9- 29.5mmHg]; P < 0.001). PbrO(2)/PaO(2) was significantly higher during pH-stat (alpha-stat, 0.190 [95% CI, 0.187- 0.193] v pH-stat, 0.251 [95% CI, 0.246-0.259]; P < 0.05). ICP was non-significantly higher during pH-stat (alpha-stat, 8.8mmHg [95% CI, 8.1-9.5mmHg] v ph-stat,10.2mmHg [95% CI, 9.6-10.8]).
Conclusion: PbrO(2) may be improved using a pH-stat blood gas management strategy in prophylactic hypothermia for paediatric patients with traumatic brain injury without any clinically relevant increase in ICP.