1. Ultrasound Elastography for Rapid, Real-time Detection of Localized Muscular Reaction in Malignant Hyperthermia-susceptible Pigs
- Author
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Susanne Isbary, Norbert Roewer, Frank Schuster, Ismail Türkmeneli, and Stephan Johannsen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Swine ,Pilot Projects ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Caffeine ,medicine ,Ultrasound elastography ,Animals ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Muscle biopsy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Malignant hyperthermia ,Diagnostic test ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthetics, Inhalation ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,Radiology ,Contracture ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Halothane ,Malignant Hyperthermia ,Muscle Contraction - Abstract
Editor’s Perspective What We Already Know about This Topic What This Article Tells Us That Is New Background Halothane and caffeine induce excessive sarcoplasmic calcium liberation and skeletal muscle contracture in patients susceptible to malignant hyperthermia (MH) and are utilized for diagnosis in the in vitro contracture test. Intramuscular injection previously caused a marked local lactate increase in MH-susceptible but not in MH-nonsusceptible individuals in vivo. Using shear-wave elastography, this study evaluated localized changes in muscle stiffness after intramuscular injection of halothane and caffeine. Methods Microdialysis probes were placed into the gracilis muscle of 16 pigs (9 MH-susceptible and 7 MH-nonsusceptible). After local injection of either halothane or caffeine in different concentrations, changes of tissue elasticity surrounding the probe were examined by quantitative shear-wave elastography. Local lactate concentrations were analyzed spectrophotometrically. Results Ultrasound elastography detected a temporary increase in local muscle rigidity in MH-susceptible but not in MH-nonsusceptible pigs after 2.5 and 5 vol% halothane and after 10, 40, and 80 mM caffeine, whereas there were no differences in the control groups (median [interquartile range] for maximum effect after 5 vol% halothane: MH-susceptible: 97 [31 to 148] vs. MH-nonsusceptible: 5 [−6 to 18] kPa; P = 0.0006; maximum effect after 80 mM caffeine: 112 [64 to 174] vs. −3 [−6 to 35] kPa; P = 0.0002). These effects were seen rapidly within 5 min. Local lactate concentrations were higher in MH-susceptible versus nonsusceptible pigs after 1 and 2.5 vol% halothane and 10, 40, and 80 mM caffeine (2.5 vol% halothane: MH-susceptible: 2.8 [1.9 to 4.4] vs. MH-nonsusceptible: 0.6 [0.6 to 0.7] mmol/l; P < 0.0001; 80 mM caffeine: 5.2 [4.1 to 6.3] vs. 1.6 [1.2 to 2.4] mmol/l; P < 0.0001). After 10 vol% halothane, rigidity and lactate levels were increased in both MH-susceptible and MH-nonsusceptible animals. Conclusions This pilot study revealed shear-wave elastography as a suitable technique for real-time detection of altered tissue elasticity in response to pharmacologic stimulation. By considering the variability of these results, further test protocol optimization is required before elastography could serve as a minimally invasive MH diagnostic test.
- Published
- 2018