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1.
R Prat  V Calatayud-Maldonado 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,140(12):1257-60; discussion 1261
It is usually defficult in clinical practice to establish factors affecting final outcome in patients suffering severe diffuse brain injury (SDBI), due to the absence of specific semiology. METHODS: We studied retrospectively 160 consecutive patients with criteria of SDBI. We performed a statistical analysis of epidemiological, clinical and radiological factors, and relationship with final outcome. RESULT: 35% of patients with severe head injury presented SDBI. Sixty percent were 15-35 year old and 73% male. More than 45% of the patients presented GCS 3 or 4. On CT performed during the first 24 h, haemorrhagic lesions appeared in white matter in 35% and subarachnoid haemorrhage was observed in 28%. During the first 24 h., 66% of patients presented values of intracranial pressure (ICP) above 20 mm Hg and a 33% below 20 mm Hg. Twenty percent of the patients had ICP > 20 mm and no response to treatment. According to the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS), mortality of more than 50% and 25% of patients with persistent vegetative state or severe disability were observed. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical evaluation, early CT findings, ICP values and their response to medical treatment and clinical complications were found to be related (p < 0.05) to final outcome (GOS).  相似文献   

2.
A 21-year-old man was injured by a tailboard of a truck. He suffered a severe head injury with bilateral depressed skull fractures necessitating surgical decompression. On admission to the hospital the patient showed bending to pain stimuli (Glasgow Coma Score 5). Anisocoria was noticed from the beginning. Initial intracranial pressure (ICP), measured 3 hours after injury, was 30 mm Hg, and the cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) was 70 mm Hg. During surgical elevation of the skull fracture on the right side an un-explainable rise of ICP to values of 100 mm Hg occurred, which corresponded to the mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). At the same time both pupils were dilated and fixed indicating a lack of cerebral perfusion. Due to immediate trephination of the opposite side, the ICP was lowered to values below 20 mm Hg, and sufficient cerebral perfusion (above 50 mm Hg) was regained. The patient showed a good recovery and was transferred to a rehabilitation center 5 weeks after injury. This case report emphasizes the importance of early and continuous intracranial pressure monitoring for adequate therapy in neurosurgical emergencies.  相似文献   

3.
A series of 72 severely head injured patients are reported, 24 (33%) with surgical intracranial hematomas. All patients were intensively cared for under the same therapeutic regime; intracranial pressure (ICP) was monitored and treated if increased. The series mortality was 39%. Uncontrollable increase of ICP (UI-ICP), always fatal, was observed in 18% of patients and in 13 of 28 deaths (46%); the incidence of UI-ICP among deaths was higher in patients less than in those more than 40 years old (55% vs 25%). Patients with UI-ICP were frequently deeply comatose and with arterial hypotension on admission; almost all died in the first days. Patients directly admitted from the scene with well staffed Life Flight Helicopter Emergency Care compared with those directly admitted from the scene with different type of ambulance service (paramedics, police, firemen and private) had a mortality rate significantly less (20% vs 54%) and an incidence of UI-ICP strongly lower both among patients (5% vs 29%) and among deaths (25% vs 54%). Thus in this small series intensive care after admission was not effective to obtain good results if patients had received poor preadmission emergency care. Review of the literature on main clinical predictors of outcome in severe head injury, have made possible some observations. Ischemic and intracranial hypertension brain lesions were generally present in patients killed by head trauma; while diffuse axonal injury, frequently responsible for vegetative, severe disability survival and late deaths, was observed only in 20-30% of postmortem examinations. Old age, poor neurological status and cardiocirculatory and respiratory disturbances prior to and upon admission positively worsened the outcome, while intracranial hematomas had a more variable predictive value. Intracranial hypertension was a definitively ominous predictor only if very high when the risk to be or become uncontrollable seems to be much elevated. UI-ICP, often fatal despite any aggressive therapy, was the single most frequent killer after severe head injury, responsible for about half of all deaths after admission. The different outcome among severe head injury series could be conceivably related to a different frequency of UI-ICP. Besides the severity of head injury and delay and mode of admission, we suggest that preadmission respiratory and cardiocirculatory and the quality of emergency medical system could strongly affect the incidence of uncontrollable increase of ICP in admitted patients and thus the mortality rate and favorable recovery of the series. The advanced preadmission emergency care service with intensive care after admission could significantly explain the better results often observed in severe head injury series.  相似文献   

4.
After severe head injury intracranial pressure (ICP) must be measured continuously for management to assess and maintain the cerebral perfusion. Therefore in our hospital epidural transducers are used. To prove the efficiency of this method in a 12-month period the clinical courses of 23 patients with intracranial pressure transducers were analysed retrospectively. Eighteen patients survived, 5 of them without residuals, 13 with residuals and 2 remained in coma. In 14 patients secondary rises of intracranial pressure were observed between days 3 and 6 post injury. The mean ICP value of the survivors revealed 25 mm Hg. whereas the expired showed 60 mm Hg. In 17 patients the measurements were considered as reliable, 6 measurements were not reliable, which included 1 of the 5 patients who died. One transduce was displaced, another one showed a hemorrhage at the drill hole. There was no infection.  相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: Secondary intracranial hypertension has been linked to leukocytosis. We examined our data bank containing physiologic recordings and outcome data of severely head injured patients to investigate the relationship between delayed increases in intracranial pressure (ICP), defined as occurring after a 12-hr period of normal ICP values, and leukocytosis. DESIGN: A retrospective study of observational data. SETTING: Regional neurosurgical unit and intensive care unit. PATIENTS: Sixty-four patients suffered increased ICP >20 mm Hg. Thirty-five patients fulfilled selection criteria for delayed increases in ICP (group 1). Twenty-nine patients with increased ICP with no preceding or intervening periods of normal ICP were selected as a comparison group (group 2). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Comparison of 12-month outcome revealed that 11% of group 1 patients died, with 49% remaining severely disabled, in contrast to group 2, where 35% of patients died and 14% were left severely disabled (p = .021). The pattern of outcome was independent of monitoring time, or injury severity. Regression modeling was performed for prediction of delayed increase in ICP. Of 46 patients with an initial increase then decrease in leukocyte count in the first 48 hrs, 65% experienced delayed increases in ICP, as compared with 18% of the 11 patients without this pattern p = .01 1). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with delayed increases have a significantly different pattern of outcome. Change in leukocyte count from admission to day 2 is a significant predictor of such a delayed increase.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE: Intraarterial papaverine infusions are performed to reverse cerebral arterial vasospasm resulting from subarachnoid hemorrhage, but such infusions may lead to increases in intracranial pressure (ICP). This study was undertaken to determine when ICP monitoring is indicated during papaverine treatment. METHODS: Seventy-eight vessels were treated in 51 sessions in 28 patients with symptomatic vasospasm. ICP, papaverine doses, and infusion rates were recorded during treatment sessions. The procedural data, Hunt and Hess scores, Fisher grades, Glasgow Coma Scale scores, and ages for all subjects were reviewed and analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS: Baseline ICP ranged from 0 to 34 mm Hg. With typical papaverine doses of 300 mg per territory and infusion times ranging from 5 to 60 minutes per vessel, ICP increases above baseline during papaverine infusion ranged from 0 to 60 mm Hg. Significant (> or = 20 mm Hg) ICP increases during therapy were observed even in patients with low baseline ICP and with papaverine infused at the slowest rate. Patients with a baseline ICP of more than 15 mm Hg were much more likely to have significant ICP increases than were patients with a baseline ICP of 0 to 15 mm Hg. Hunt and Hess scores, Fisher grades, age, and Glasgow Coma Scale scores on admission and immediately before treatment did not correlate with ICP increases during papaverine infusion. Patients with ICP increases of more than 10 mm Hg during therapy were more likely to experience adverse clinical events than were patients with ICP increases of < or = 10 mm Hg. Reduction in the rate of papaverine infusion, or termination of infusion, resulted in reversal of drug-induced ICP elevation. CONCLUSION: ICP monitoring during intraarterial papaverine infusions for cerebral vasospasm is recommended for all patients and is particularly important for patients with elevated baseline ICP. Continuous ICP monitoring facilitates safe and time-efficient drug delivery.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: For neuroanesthesia and neurocritical care the use of drugs that do not increase or preferentially decrease intracranial pressure (ICP) or change cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) and cerebral blood flow (CBF) are preferred. The current study investigates the effects of a single rapid bolus dose of cisatracurium on cerebral blood flow velocity, ICP, CPP, mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) in 24 mechanically ventilated patients with intracranial hypertension after severe brain trauma (Glasgow coma scale <6) under continuous sedation with sufentanil and midazolam. METHODS: Patients were randomly assigned to receive either 2xED95 (n=12) or 4xED95 (n=12) of cisatracurium as a rapid i.v. bolus injection. Before and after bolus administration mean cerebral blood flow velocity (BFV, cm/s) was measured in the middle cerebral artery using a 2-MHz transcranial Doppler sonography system, ICP (mm Hg) was measured using an extradural probe, and MAP (mm Hg) and HR (b/min) were measured during a study period of 20 min. Cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP=MAP-ICP) was also calculated. RESULTS: Our data show that a single bolus dose of up to 4xED95 cisatracurium caused no significant (P<0.05) changes in BFV, ICP, CPP, MAP and HR. Possible histamine-related events were not observed during the study. CONCLUSIONS: The results from this study suggest that cisatracurium is a safe neuromuscular blocking agent for use in adult severe brain-injured patients with increased ICP under mild hyperventilation and continuous sedation.  相似文献   

8.
KY Goh  WS Poon 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,50(6):526-31; discussion 531-2
BACKGROUND: Intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) has a poor prognosis with mortality rates of between 80 and 100% when all four ventricles are involved. Fibrinolytic therapy has been reported to improve overall outcome. METHODS: Patients with severe primary IVH were treated by direct intraventricular injection of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) into the lateral ventricles, followed by cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage if the intracranial pressure rose above 20 mm Hg. RESULTS: Over a 15-month period from 1995 through 1996, 10 patients were treated, (4 male and 6 female, mean age 35 years; range, 21-55 years). The mean Glasgow Coma Scale score on admission was 6 (range, 4-8) and the mean Graeb score for severity of IVH on the first CT scan was 10 (range, 8-12). Angiography was negative in five cases but identified arteriovenous malformations in three, a post-traumatic pseudoaneurysm in one, and Moya-moya disease in one. The mean total dose requirement of rt-PA was 8.25 mg (range, 6-12 mg) with a significant reduction in the mean Graeb score after 7 days to 3.9 (range, 2-7, p<0.0001). Outcome at 3 months was death in one case (mortality 10%), severe disability in two (20%), moderate disability in three (30%), and good result in four (40%). Four patients (40%) required subsequent CSF shunting. No complications of rehemorrhage, infection, or catheter obstruction were encountered. CONCLUSION: Intraventricular fibrinolysis with rt-PA seems to be safe and effective for the treatment of severe IVH.  相似文献   

9.
Ischaemic brain lesions still have a high prevalence in fatally head injured patients and are the single most important cause of secondary brain damage. The present study was undertaken to explore the acute phase of severely head injured patients in order to detect early ischaemia using Robertson's approach of estimating cerebral blood flow (CBF) from calculated arterio-jugular differences of oxygen (AVDO2), lactates (AVDL), and the lactate-oxygen index (LOI). Twenty-eight cases with severe head injury were included (Glasgow Coma Scale Score below or equal to 8). All patients but one had a non-missile head injury. All the patients had a diffuse brain injury according to the admission CT scan. ICP measured at the time of admission was below 20 mmHg in 17 cases (61%). All patients were evaluated with the ischaemia score (IS) devised in our center to evaluate risk factors for developing ischaemia. Mean time from injury to the first AVDO2/AVDL study was 23.9 +/- 9.9 hours. According to Robertson's criteria, 13 patients (46%) had a calculated LOI (-AVDL/AVDO2) value above or equal to 0.08 and therefore an ischaemia/infarction pattern in the first 24 hours after the accident. Of the 15 patients without the ischaemia/infarction pattern, in three cases the CBF was below the metabolic demands and therefore in a situation of compensated hypoperfusion. No patient in our series had hyperaemia. Comparing different variables in ischaemic and non-ischaemic patients, only arterial haemoglobin and ischaemia score (IS) was significantly different in both groups. The ischaemia score had mean of 4.3 +/- 1.7 in the ischaemic group and 2.7 +/- 1.4 in non-ischaemic patients (p = 0.01). It is concluded that ischaemia is highly prevalent in the early period after severe head injury. Factors potentially responsible of early ischaemia are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Diaspirin cross-linked haemoglobin (DCLHb) is a new oxygen carrying blood substitute with vasoactive properties. Vasoactive properties may be mediated via high affinity binding of nitric oxide by the haem moiety. Using a rodent model of head injury combined with ischaemia, we studied the effects of DCLHb on cerebral blood flow (CBF) and intracranial pressure (ICP). Twenty anaesthetized rats were allocated randomly to receive treatment with DCLHb 400 mg kg-1 i.v. or placebo (oncotically matched plasma protein substitute 4.5% i.v.). To produce diffusely increased ICP, after a severe weight drop injury, all animals underwent a 30-min period of bilateral carotid ligation combined with a period of induced hypotension. After reperfusion, DCLHb or placebo was infused and the animals instrumented for measurement of intraventricular ICP and CBF in the region of the sensorimotor cortex using the hydrogen clearance technique. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), ICP, cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) (CPP = MAP - ICP) and CBF were measured 4 h after injury in all animals. DCLHb significantly reduced ICP from mean 13 (SEM 2) to 3 (1) mm Hg (P < 0.001), increased CPP from 52 (8) to 95 (6) mm Hg (P < 0.001) and increased CBF from 21 (2) to 29 (2) ml 100 g-1 min-1 (P = 0.032). We conclude that DCLHb improved CPP without a reduction in CBF in a rodent model of post-traumatic brain swelling.  相似文献   

11.
To estimate the surgical efficacy of decompressive craniotomy, 23 children under 2 years of age with acute shaken/impact baby syndrome were treated with medical or surgical methods over the past 6 years. Six children (group A) with lower intracranial pressure (ICP, less than 30 mm Hg) were treated with medical therapy, and 17 children with high ICP (more than 30 mm Hg) of which 7 children were treated with medical therapy (group B) and another 10 children (group C) were treated with decompressive craniotomy. Bifrontal craniotomy was performed on 5 children with generalized brain swelling. A large frontotemporoparietal craniotomy was performed on another 5 children with unilateral swelling. A mean of 32 ml of subdural hematoma was removed. The mean ICP was reduced by 80% in the craniotomy group, p < 0.05. Children in groups A and C performed better on the Children's Outcome Scale than those in group B, p < 0.05. Mortality was significantly lower (0/10) in group C than in group B (3/7), p < 0.05. Hearing preservation was better in group C than in group B, p < 0.05. Bifrontal and frontotemporoparietal craniotomies may reduce mortality and morbidity for acute shaken/impact baby syndrome with high ICP. Patients with ICP less than 30 mm Hg may be treated successfully with medical therapy and patients with ICP more than 30 mm Hg are better treated with decompressive craniotomy.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Until now the assessment of intracranial pressure (ICP) required invasive methods. The objective of this study was to introduce an approach to a noninvasive assessment of continuous ICP curves. METHODS: The intracranial compartment was considered a "black box" system with an input signal, the arterial blood pressure (ABP), and an output signal, the ICP. A so-called weight function described the relationship between ABP and ICP curves. Certain parameters, called transcranial Doppler (TCD) characteristics, were calculated from the cerebral blood flow velocity (FV) and the ABP curves and were used to estimate this weight function. From simultaneously sampled FV, ABP, and (invasively measured) ICP curves of a defined group of patients with severe head injuries, the TCD characteristics and the weight function were computed. Multiple regression analysis revealed a mathematical formula for calculating the weight function from TCD characteristics. This formula was used to generate the ICP simulation. FV, ABP, and ICP recordings from 11 patients (mean age, 46 +/- 14 years) with severe head injury were studied. In each patient, ICP was computed by a simulation procedure, generated from the data of the remaining 10 patients. The simulation period was 100 seconds. RESULTS: Corresponding pressure trends with a mean absolute difference of 4.0 +/- 1.8 mm Hg between computed and measured ICP were observed. Shapes of pulse and respiratory ICP modulations were clearly predicted. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that this method constitutes a promising step toward a noninvasive ICP prediction that may be clinically applicable under well-defined conditions.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The sudden death rate from aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is 10%. Since 1989, 26 SAH patients who were witnessed to collapse into coma with respiratory arrest and required cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) at the scene survived to reach the hospital and be diagnosed. Although reports on hospital management of grade V SAH suggest improved outcome, no report has previously addressed the issue of respiratory arrest after acute SAH. We analyze our experience with this unique subgroup of aneurysmal SAH patients. METHODS: This is a retrospective analysis of 26 consecutive SAH patients who collapsed at the scene and required CPR for respiratory arrest and survived to reach the hospital and be diagnosed. Statistical analysis was performed using the t test and Mann-Whitney rank-sum test. RESULTS: All patients were grade V on arrival at the emergency department. Twenty-one patients received mouth-to-mouth resuscitation only, and 5 received chest compressions as well. The mean duration of bystander CPR was 12 to 15 minutes. CT scan showed diffuse, thick SAH in all patients, an associated subdural hemorrhage in 2, and an intraparenchymal hemorrhage in 4. After CT scan, an intracranial pressure (ICP) monitor was placed in 24, and 2 were taken to emergency surgery for subdural and intracerebral hemorrhage. ICP was elevated in 24 patients (mean, 54 mm Hg), and a ventriculostomy was placed in all 24. ICP was unresponsive in 12, and all suffered brain death. ICP lessened to < 25 mm Hg in 12, and all underwent angiography. All 12 had an aneurysm and underwent emergency surgical clipping. Time to surgery from SAH was < or = 11 hours in all 12 patients. All were managed with calcium channel blockers and hyperdynamic therapy in addition to aggressive control of ICP. The outcome at 12 months in the 14 surgical cases was normal in 3 patients (21%), good in 2 (14%), vegetative in 1 (7%), and death in 8 (57%). CONCLUSIONS: Aneurysmal SAH patients that present with respiratory arrest present as grade V patients with elevated ICP. Bystander CPR coupled with early retrieval, diagnosis, and therapy can lead to 20% functional survival in what used to be sudden death from aneurysmal SAH.  相似文献   

14.
D Pang  E Altschuler 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1994,35(4):643-55; discussion 655-6
Most shunt-dependent hydrocephalic patients present with predictable symptoms of headache and mental status changes when their cerebrospinal fluid shunts malfunction. Their intracranial pressure (ICP) is usually high, and they usually respond to routine shunt revision. This report describes 12 shunted patients who were admitted with the full-blown hydrocephalic syndrome but with low to low-normal ICP. All 12 patients had been maintained previously on medium-pressure shunts. Their symptoms included headache, lethargy, obtundation, and cranial neuropathies. At peak symptoms, their ventricular sizes were large (ventricular/biparietal ratio of 0.35 to 0.45) in six and massive (ventricular/biparietal ratio > 0.45) in six and their ICPs ranged from 2.2 to 6.6 mm Hg, with a mean of 4.4 +/- 1.3 mm Hg (+/- standard deviation), i.e., below or well within the pressure range of their shunts. The pressure volume index of three patients at peak symptoms ranged from 39.2 to 48.5 ml, with a mean of 43.9 +/- 4.6 ml, which represents a 190% increase from the predicted normal value. Seven patients failed to improve with multiple shunt revisions, including the use of low-pressure valves. In 11 patients, symptoms and ventriculomegaly were not reversed except with prolonged external ventricular drainage at subzero pressures (mean external ventricular drainage nadir pressure of -5.7 +/- 3.6 mm Hg, for a mean period of 22.2 days). During external ventricular drainage treatment, symptoms correlated only with ventricular size and not with ICP. All 11 were subsequently treated successfully with a new medium- or low-pressure shunt. One patient was treated successfully with prolonged shunt pumping. We postulate that: 1) the development of this low-pressure hydrocephalic state is related to alteration of the viscoelastic modulus of the brain, secondary to expulsion of extracellular water from the brain parenchyma, and to structural changes in brain tissues due to prolonged overstretching; 2) certain patients are susceptible to developing low-pressure hydrocephalic state because of an innate low brain elasticity due to bioatrophic changes; 3) low-pressure hydrocephalic state symptoms are due not to pressure changes but to brain tissue distortion and cortical ischemia secondary to severe ventricular distortion and elevated radial compressive stresses within the brain; and 4) treatment must be directed toward allowing the entry of water into the brain parenchyma and the restoration of baseline brain viscoelasticity.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: The management of malignant posttraumatic cerebral edema remains a frustrating endeavor for the neurosurgeon and the intensivist. Mortality and morbidity rates remain high despite refinements in medical and pharmacological means of controlling elevated intracranial pressure; therefore, a comparison of medical management versus decompressive craniectomy in the management of malignant posttraumatic cerebral edema was undertaken. METHODS: At the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, 35 bifrontal decompressive craniectomies were performed on patients suffering from malignant posttraumatic cerebral edema. A control population was formed of patients whose data was accrued in the Traumatic Coma Data Bank. Patients who had undergone surgery were matched with one to four control patients based on sex, age, preoperative Glasgow Coma Scale scores, and maximum preoperative intracranial pressure (ICP). RESULTS: The overall rate of good recovery and moderate disability for the patients who underwent craniectomies was 37% (13 of 35 patients), whereas the mortality rate was 23% (8 of 35 patients). Pediatric patients had a higher rate of favorable outcome (44%, 8 of 18 patients) than did adult patients. Postoperative ICP was lower than preoperative ICP in patients who underwent decompression (P = 0.0003). Postoperative ICP was lower in patients who underwent surgery than late measurements of ICP in the matched control population. A statistically significant increased rate of favorable outcomes was seen in the patients who underwent surgery compared to the matched control patients (15.4%) (P = 0.014). All patients who exhibited sustained ICP values above 40 torr and those who underwent surgery more than 48 hours after the time of injury did poorly. Evaluation of the 20 patients who did not fit into either of those categories revealed a 60% rate of favorable outcome and a statistical advantage over control patients (P = 0.0001). CONCLUSION: Decompressive bifrontal craniectomy provides a statistical advantage over medical treatment of intractable posttraumatic cerebral hypertension and should be considered in the management of malignant posttraumatic cerebral swelling. If the operation can be accomplished before the ICP value exceeds 40 torr for a sustained period and within 48 hours of the time of injury, the potential to influence outcome is greatest.  相似文献   

16.
Traumatic intracranial hematomas which are present on hospital admission or which develop during the hospital course are associated with a worse neurological outcome than diffuse injuries. The purpose of this study was to monitor jugular venous oxygen saturation (Sjvo2) during surgery for evacuation of traumatic intracranial mass lesions, to determine the incidence and the causes of jugular venous desaturation, and to assess the usefulness of Sjvo2 monitoring in this setting. Twenty-five severely head injured patients were monitored during 27 surgical procedures. At the start of the surgical procedure, the median Sjvo2 was 47% (range 25%-89%). Seventeen (63%) of the patients had a Sjvo2 less than 50%. Five patients had extremely low Sjvo2 values (< or = 30%). Upon evacuation of the intracranial hematoma, there was a significant (P < 0.001) increase in the median Sjvo2 to 65% (range 50%-88%). Intracranial hypertension was the primary cause of the low Sjvo2, as confirmed by the response to surgical evacuation. Hypotension (mean arterial pressure < 80 mm Hg) was a contributing factor in seven of the cases of jugular desaturation. The definitive treatment of a traumatic intracranial hematoma is surgical evacuation. However, during the period prior to evacuation of the hematoma, jugular venous desaturation was common, suggesting that monitoring Sjvo2 might provide useful information about the adequacy of cerebral perfusion.  相似文献   

17.
Enflurane (Ethrane) was given before operation to 13 neurosurgical patients. 11 of them received halothane for comparison of effects on intracranial pressure (ventricular catheter), blood pressure and central venous pressure during controlled ventilation. Neuroleptanalgesia was used as basic anaesthesia. The results showed that enflurane, when initial pressure levels were between 0-20 mm Hg, had better properties with regard to intracranial pressure than halothane. The intracranial pressure of 6 patients under enflurane rose. Of the remaining patients pressure did not change or even fell. Under halothane, given in a comparable doses, there was always a marked increase of intracranial pressure. If intracranial pressure of one patient under enflurane rose, then the increase by halothane always was more pronounced. The results from 1 patient had to be excluded because of spontaneously occurring plateau waves. Blood pressure was lowered by both agents while central venous pressure remained unchanged.  相似文献   

18.
As part of a prospective study of the cerebrovascular effects of head injury, 54 moderate and severely injured patients underwent 184 133Xe-cerebral blood flow (CBF) studies to determine the relationship between the period of maximum blood flow and outcome. The lowest blood flows were observed on the day of injury (Day 0) and the highest CBFs were documented on postinjury Days 1 to 5. Patients were divided into three groups based on CBF values obtained during this period of maximum flow: Group 1 (seven patients), CBF less than 33 ml/100 g/minute on all determinations; Group 2 (13 patients), CBF both less than and greater than or equal to 33 ml/100 g/minute; and Group 3 (34 patients), CBF greater than or equal to 33 ml/100 g/minute on all measurements. For Groups 1, 2, and 3, mean CBF during Days 1 to 5 postinjury was 25.7 +/- 4, 36.5 +/- 4.2, and 49.4 +/- 9.3 ml/100 g/minute, respectively, and PaCO2 at the time of the CBF study was 31.4 +/- 6, 32.7 +/- 2.9, and 33.4 +/- 4.7 mm Hg, respectively. There were significant differences across Groups 1, 2, and 3 regarding mean age, percentage of individuals younger than 35 years of age (42.9%, 23.1%, and 76.5%, respectively), incidence of patients requiring evacuation of intradural hematomas (57.1%, 38.5%, and 17.6%, respectively) and incidence of abnormal pupils (57.1%, 61.5%, and 32.4%, respectively). Favorable neurological outcome at 6 months postinjury in Groups 1, 2, and 3 was 0%, 46.2%, and 58.8%, respectively (p < 0.05). Further analysis of patients in Group 3 revealed that of 14 with poor outcomes, six had one or more episodes of hyperemia-associated intracranial hypertension (simultaneous CBF > 55 ml/100 g/minute and ICP > 20 mm Hg). These six patients were unique in having the highest CBFs for postinjury Days 1 to 5 (mean 59.8 ml/100 g/minute) and the most severe degree of intracranial hypertension and reduced cerebral perfusion pressure (p < 0.0001). These results indicate that a phasic elevation in CBF acutely after head injury is a necessary condition for achieving functional recovery. It is postulated that for the majority of patients, this rise in blood flow results from an increase in metabolic demands in the setting of intact vasoreactivity. In a minority of individuals, however, the constellation of supranormal CBF, severe intracranial hypertension, and poor outcome indicates a state of grossly impaired vasoreactivity with uncoupling between blood flow and metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
This prospective review of adult patients with head injuries examines the incidence of head injuries due to falls caused by seizures, the incidence and severity of intracranial hematomas, and the morbidity and mortality rates in this patient population. A head injury was attributed to a fall caused by a seizure if the seizure was witnessed to have caused the fall, or the patient had a known seizure history, appeared postictal or was found convulsing after the fall, and no other cause for the fall was evident. A total of 1760 adult head-injured patients were consecutively admitted to the authors' service between 1986 and 1993. Five hundred eighty-two head injuries (33.1%) were due to falls and 22 (3.8%) of these were caused by seizures. Based on the prevalence rates for epilepsy in the general population of 0.5 to 2%, these results indicate that epileptics are several times more likely to suffer a head injury due to a fall. Mass lesions were found in 20 (90.9%) of these 22 patients and the remaining two patients suffered mild diffuse head injuries. There was a high incidence of extraaxial mass lesions: 17 (85%) of the 20 intracranial hematomas were either epidural (five cases) or acute subdural (12 cases) hematomas. Eighteen (81.8%) of the 22 patients required evacuation of a hematoma. Both the incidence of intracranial hematomas (90.9% vs. 39.8%, p < 0.001, chi-square analysis) and the rate of hematoma evacuation (81.8% vs. 32.3%; p < 0.001) was significantly greater in patients injured in falls due to seizures (22 cases) than in the group injured in falls from all other causes (560 cases). The higher incidence of hematomas and the need for evacuation were not explained by differences in age, seventy of head injury, or incidence of alcohol intoxication. Despite the greater incidence of mass lesions and the need for operative treatment in patients injured because of seizures, their mortality rate was similar to that of patients injured in falls from other causes. On the basis of their review of patients admitted to a neurosurgical center with complaints of head injury, the authors conclude that patients with head injuries due to a fall caused by a seizure should undergo computerized tomography scanning early in their management. Until a mass lesion has been excluded, any decrease in level of consciousness or focal neurological deficit should not be attributed to the seizure itself.  相似文献   

20.
SC Stein  C Spettell  G Young  SE Ross 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1993,32(1):25-30; discussion 30-1
The importance of delayed or secondary brain insults in the eventual outcome of closed-head trauma has been documented in experimental models. To understand this phenomenon in the clinical setting, we studied a series of head-injured patients in whom multiple cranial computed tomographic (CT) scans were obtained. Patients whose follow-up CT studies revealed new intracranial lesions or worsening, compared with admission findings, were considered to have delayed cerebral injury. One hundred forty-nine (44.5%) of 337 consecutively studied patients developed delayed brain injury. There were highly significant associations (P < 0.001) between the appearance of delayed cerebral insults and the severity of the initial brain injury, the need for cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the field, the presence of coagulopathy at admission, and subdural hematoma on the initial CT scan. In addition, delayed injury was associated (P < 0.001) with higher mortality, slowed recovery, and poorer outcome at 6 months. Delayed brain injury was not significantly associated with patient age, sex, injury mechanism, associated injury, the need for endotracheal intubation in the field, early talking, CT abnormality other than intracranial hematoma, or type of residual neurological deficits. We used multiple regression analysis to explore the relationship between severity of injury, delayed insults, and outcome. As expected, the severity of the initial brain trauma contributed significantly to neurological outcome. The presence of delayed cerebral injury makes the outcome dramatically worse for each category of initial injury severity. The relationship between initial and secondary brain injury is discussed.  相似文献   

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