Hypothermia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Study of a New Clinical Device for Reducing Body Core Temperature
This is a descriptive, nonrandomized, noninvasive, single-group, single-center pilot study of
a Core Cooling System (CCS) device for reducing core body temperature in ICU patients at
University Medical Center Brackenridge (UMCB) and Seton Medical Center Austin (SMCA). The
proposed research on human subjects will provide data that will be used to improve a
specialized human heat transfer technique/device. By stimulating specialized blood vessels
(arteriovenous anastomoses) AVAs in the palm of the hand, it is possible to greatly increase
local blood flow and thus greatly increase the potential for effective heat transfer between
the environment and body.
The hypothesis of this trial is that the Core Cooling System (CCS) will prove to be a
practical, safe, and effective method to raise or lower body temperature in critically ill
patients.
Introduction:
The ability to manipulate body core temperatures quickly and effectively would impact a
number of fields, with truly transformative potential. By far the best way to effect a change
in body temperature is perfusion with cooled or warmed blood because the vasculature of the
human body equilibrates magnificently well with the body and especially the body core tissues
due to the diffuse microcirculation. This process is quite invasive, however, and noninvasive
techniques to date have mostly revolved around various surface heat transfer mechanisms that
ultimately rely on relatively inferior conduction heat transfer.
Grahn, et al., at Stanford University have identified a new technique to increase the rate of
heat transfer between the skin and the body core by up to a factor of ten by harnessing the
convective power of the circulatory system in a completely noninvasive way [1, 2]. Our system
is derivative of the Stanford device, but different in many significant ways.
A well-understood and thus modifiable system capable of rapid artificial heat transfer has
almost limitless potential applications, including treatment of acute brain trauma (where the
single greatest challenge to treatment is inducing immediate hypothermia), athletic
performance enhancement, military operations, and enhancement of industries in which workers
are subject to extreme thermal stress.
Description of the Technology/Device:
The technology works as a two-step process, consisting of first stimulating the blood flow to
the AVAs and second cooling the glabrous skin through which blood is flowing. Accordingly,
the device consists of two components: first a blood flow stimulation source, and second a
surface heat exchanger to chill the glabrous skin and thereby the blood flowing through it
that subsequently flows back to the body core, where it cools those tissues.
Two separate means of stimulation will be tested in the trial:
- Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) - An FDA-approved TENS unit sends a
current via surface electrodes through the skin to stimulate the nerves that control the
state of AVA vasoconstriction. This stimulation will create a vasodilation effect in the
AVAs, allowing an increase in blood flow.
- Mild thermal stimulation along the skin overlying the cervical spine to send a control
signal to vasodilate the AVAs and provide an increased blood flow to glabrous skin. An
FDA-approved electric heating pad is used for this purpose at a temperature of 42°C or
lower.
Cooling will be accomplished by applying water perfusion bladders to the hands and feet. The
water will recirculate through the bladders to a holding tank with an internal pump, and a
thermoelectric cooler regulates the water temperature. The water temperature will be at 20°C
or higher.
Research Incentive:
The AVA structures in glabrous (non-hairy) skin are one component of the body's natural
thermoregulatory system. The anatomy and morphology of AVAs have been described to a great
extent in the literature, e.g. Sherman [6]. Putative pre-AVA sphincters are thought to be the
primary controllers of perfusion through AVAs, regardless of the level of AVA vasodilation.
If the AVAs are completely dilated, but the sphincters closed, blood will pool in the dilated
AVAs, but the flow of blood, which is essential for heat exchange with the core, will be
minimal. In contrast to perfusion of capillaries, which is largely regulated by local
conditions, flow through AVAs appears to be mostly centrally mediated, controlled primarily
by the vasoconstrictor tone imparted by rich sympathetic innervation [7-10]. The sympathetic
vasoconstrictor tone, which appears to oscillate in a characteristic manner over time, is
controlled by the central nervous system's homeostatic centers that respond to various
centrally located core temperature receptors. The complete inner workings of this control
system and its effector mechanisms are not completely understood or quantified, and other
factors influence AVA blood flow to some degree, such as local skin temperatures, the
presence of vasoactive metabolites, level of exercise, and stimulation of various peripheral
thermal sites. Recent work in the Diller lab has indicated the potential inherent in the
latter. The lab has identified regions of the skin that may be non-energetically thermally
stimulated (heating over a small area so as not to warm a significant volume) to induce AVA
vasodilation. We hypothesize these sites contain important thermoafferent sensors that impact
the central component (hypothalamic) of the governing controller.
The ability to induce mild hypothermia from a normothermic state represents the application
of greatest interest to our research group. If optimally developed, a device capable of
inducing only a 2-4°C decrease in body core temperature could have a huge impact in treatment
of various medical disease states and/or emergencies, including cardiac arrest, severe brain
injury, and stroke. It is well known that tissue death due to traumatic physical injury
and/or ischemia can be decreased with therapeutic hypothermia because of the temperature
dependence of cellular metabolism and the complex, destructive biochemical processes that
occur in damaged tissues [12].
Therapeutic hypothermia has been shown to have a great effect in various animal models;
however, translation of these results to the clinical domain has been very difficult. Aside
from any possible interspecies physiological differences, researchers are able to produce
injury and cool the core of the research animals in a very controlled manner, and most
importantly, cooling is induced very soon after injury. From these experiments, it has been
suggested that a "window of opportunity" exists of about 90 minutes post injury, after which
little to no therapeutic effect occurs from mild hypothermia. Moreover, this 90-minute
threshold may itself be a stretch, and cooling within a 60-minute window may be most
appropriate. Clinically, cooling within the former and surely the latter windows has almost
never been achieved. There are a number of reasons for this: the time between injury and
mobilization of the patient, transportation to an emergency care facility, initial assessment
of the patient in the hospital setting, and most importantly for physiological science, a
lack of fast and effective methods to cool the body core. Due to simple size and geometry,
the human body is much more difficult to heat or cool than, for example, the rat model. This
is especially true for conductive heat transfer mechanisms (which is what most current
noninvasive therapeutic hypothermia implementations are based on) because of the relatively
small ratio of surface area to thermal mass volume [3].
We hope that the problem of rapid core temperature manipulation can be drastically improved
upon, specifically by utilizing convective heat transfer through AVAs of glabrous skin. In
these experiments, we believe an optimized combinatorial protocol utilizing large coverage of
glabrous regions (both palms plus soles of the feet), manipulation of mean skin temperature,
and especially optimized stimulation of peripheral thermoafferent sensors located in regions
of the body such as along the spine, can allow for mild hypothermia induction in spite of the
conflict with the thermoregulatory controller. We especially hope that manipulation of
important thermoafferents will allow us to "trick" the controller and bypass its effective
vasoconstrictive signal.
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