Systematic review
of cognitive impairment and brain insult after mechanical ventilation
by Thiago G. Bassi, Elizabeth C. Rohrs and Steven C.
Reynolds
Critical Care volume 25,
Article number: 99 (2021)
We conducted a systematic review following the PRISMA
protocol primarily to identify publications that assessed any links between
mechanical ventilation (MV) and either cognitive impairment or brain insult,
independent of underlying medical conditions. Secondary objectives were to
identify possible gaps in the literature that can be used to inform future
studies and move toward a better understanding of this complex problem. The
preclinical literature suggests that MV is associated with neuroinflammation,
cognitive impairment, and brain insult, reporting higher neuroinflammatory
markers, greater evidence of brain injury markers, and lower cognitive scores
in subjects that were ventilated longer, compared to those ventilated less, and
to never-ventilated subjects. The clinical literature suggests an association
between MV and delirium, and that delirium in mechanically ventilated patients
may be associated with greater likelihood of long-term cognitive impairment;
our systematic review found no clinical study that demonstrated a causal link
between MV, cognitive dysfunction, and brain insult. More studies should be
designed to investigate ventilation-induced brain injury pathways as well as
any causative linkage between MV, cognitive impairment, and brain insult.
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