Objective: To investigate the long-term influence of erythrocyte transfusion on cerebral oxygenation in patients with severe traumatic brain injury.
Design: Prospective and observational study.
Setting: Neurotrauma intensive care unit of trauma center level I.
Patients: Sixty consecutive, hemodynamically stable patients with severe traumatic brain injury, pretransfusion hemoglobin<100g/l, non-bleeding and monitored through intracranial pressure and brain tissue partial pressure of oxygen (PtiO(2)) catheters were included.
Interventions: Transfusion of 1-2 units of red blood cells.
Measurements and results: Ten sets of variables (pretransfusion, end of transfusion, and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12 and 24h after transfusion) were recorded, including: PtiO(2), cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), end-tidal CO(2), peripheral saturation of oxygen, temperature, hemoglobin, lactate and PaO(2)/FiO(2) ratio. Transfusion was associated with an increase in PtiO(2) during a 6-h period, with a peak at 3h (26.2%; p=0.0001) in 78.3% of the patients. No relationship was observed between PtiO(2), CPP and hemoglobin increments. The relative increment in PtiO(2) at hour 3 was only correlated with baseline PtiO(2) (r(2) 0.166; p=0.001). All of the patients with basal PtiO(2)<15mmHg showed an increment in PtiO(2) versus 74.5% of patients with basal PtiO(2)>or=15mmHg (p<0.01, hour 3).
Conclusions: Erythrocyte transfusion is associated with a variable and prolonged increment of cerebral tissue oxygenation in anemic patients with severe traumatic brain injury. Low baseline PtiO(2) levels (<15mmHg) could define those patients who benefit the most from erythrocyte transfusion.