Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Dec 2020)

Ultrafast Hypothermia Selectively Mitigates the Early Humoral Response After Cardiac Arrest

  • Emilie Boissady,
  • Matthias Kohlhauer,
  • Fanny Lidouren,
  • Hakim Hocini,
  • Cécile Lefebvre,
  • Sophie Chateau‐Jouber,
  • Nicolas Mongardon,
  • Nicolas Deye,
  • Alain Cariou,
  • Philippe Micheau,
  • Bijan Ghaleh,
  • Renaud Tissier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.120.017413
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 23

Abstract

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Background Total liquid ventilation (TLV) has been shown to prevent neurological damage though ultrafast cooling in animal models of cardiac arrest. We investigated whether its neuroprotective effect could be explained by mitigation of early inflammatory events. Methods and Results Rabbits were submitted to 10 minutes of ventricular fibrillation. After resuscitation, they underwent normothermic follow‐up (control) or ultrafast cooling by TLV and hypothermia maintenance for 3 hours (TLV). Immune response, survival, and neurological dysfunction were assessed for 3 days. TLV improved neurological recovery and reduced cerebral lesions and leukocyte infiltration as compared with control (eg, neurological dysfunction score=34±6 versus 66±6% at day 1, respectively). TLV also significantly reduced interleukin‐6 blood levels during the hypothermic episode (298±303 versus 991±471 pg/mL in TLV versus control at 3 hours after resuscitation, respectively), but not after rewarming (752±563 versus 741±219 pg/mL in TLV versus control at 6 hours after resuscitation, respectively). In vitro assays confirmed the high temperature sensitivity of interleukin‐6 secretion. Conversely, TLV did not modify circulating high‐mobility group box 1 levels or immune cell recruitment into the peripheral circulation. The link between interleukin‐6 early transcripts (8 hours). Conclusions The neuroprotective effect of hypothermic TLV was associated with a mitigation of humoral interleukin‐6 response. A temperature‐dependent attenuation of immune cell reactivity during the early phase of the post–cardiac arrest syndrome could explain the potent effect of rapid hypothermia. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT00999583.

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