A. A. Chacón-Aponte, É. A. Durán-Vargas, I. Lozada‐Martínez, M. Bolaño-Romero, L. Moscote-Salazar, Tariq Janjua, O. J. Díaz-Castillo
{"title":"低温治疗重型颅脑外伤患者颅内高压:模式被打破了吗?","authors":"A. A. Chacón-Aponte, É. A. Durán-Vargas, I. Lozada‐Martínez, M. Bolaño-Romero, L. Moscote-Salazar, Tariq Janjua, O. J. Díaz-Castillo","doi":"10.32587/jnic.2021.00381","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"imately 350 per 100,000 person-years and is a leading cause of death and disability in trauma patients. The presentation of TBI varies from mild alterations of consciousness to a comatose state and death. However, despite the existence of many classification systems, the simplest includes mild, moderate, and severe TBI, in which the nature of the injury and the impact on the patient's clinical condition is considered. In the last decade, a clear trend has been demonstrated towards deterioration in patients with severe TBI, in which the whole brain is affected precisely because of the characteristics and degree of injury. This deterioration may be associated with a loss of autoregulation due to the lack of reactivity of cerebral vascular pressure, resulting in hyperemia, interstitial edema and subsequent intracranial hypertension (ICH). Normal intracranial pressure in adults is less than 15 mm Hg, values that remain above 20 mm Hg are considered pathological and are an indication for intensified treatment in patients with TBI. It is important to consider that ICH can result from primary injury (hematoma expansion) or secondary damage (water accumulation, impaired autoregulation, ischemia, and contusion expansion). This is associated with high mortality rates, so multiple early, stepwise, and rescue management strategies have been proposed for its control, which is aimed at preventing secondary injury by avoiding hypotension, hypoxia and maintaining adequate cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). Targeted treatment is essential and may include cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage, use of hyperosmolar therapies, induction of hypothermia, hyperventilation, administration of barbiturates, or performance of decompressive surgery. Therapeutic hypothermia (TH) is one of the few neuroprotectants that has moved from preclinical work to clinical use. For example, it was previously used to prevent brain damage during cardiac surgical procedures, but more recently it has also been used to improve both neurological and physical outHypothermia for the Management of Intracranial Hypertension in Severe Brain Trauma: The Paradigm is Broken?","PeriodicalId":356321,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Neurointensive Care","volume":"10 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Hypothermia for the Management of Intracranial Hypertension in Severe Brain Trauma: The Paradigm is Broken?\",\"authors\":\"A. A. Chacón-Aponte, É. A. Durán-Vargas, I. Lozada‐Martínez, M. Bolaño-Romero, L. Moscote-Salazar, Tariq Janjua, O. J. Díaz-Castillo\",\"doi\":\"10.32587/jnic.2021.00381\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"imately 350 per 100,000 person-years and is a leading cause of death and disability in trauma patients. The presentation of TBI varies from mild alterations of consciousness to a comatose state and death. However, despite the existence of many classification systems, the simplest includes mild, moderate, and severe TBI, in which the nature of the injury and the impact on the patient's clinical condition is considered. In the last decade, a clear trend has been demonstrated towards deterioration in patients with severe TBI, in which the whole brain is affected precisely because of the characteristics and degree of injury. This deterioration may be associated with a loss of autoregulation due to the lack of reactivity of cerebral vascular pressure, resulting in hyperemia, interstitial edema and subsequent intracranial hypertension (ICH). Normal intracranial pressure in adults is less than 15 mm Hg, values that remain above 20 mm Hg are considered pathological and are an indication for intensified treatment in patients with TBI. It is important to consider that ICH can result from primary injury (hematoma expansion) or secondary damage (water accumulation, impaired autoregulation, ischemia, and contusion expansion). This is associated with high mortality rates, so multiple early, stepwise, and rescue management strategies have been proposed for its control, which is aimed at preventing secondary injury by avoiding hypotension, hypoxia and maintaining adequate cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). Targeted treatment is essential and may include cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage, use of hyperosmolar therapies, induction of hypothermia, hyperventilation, administration of barbiturates, or performance of decompressive surgery. 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Hypothermia for the Management of Intracranial Hypertension in Severe Brain Trauma: The Paradigm is Broken?
imately 350 per 100,000 person-years and is a leading cause of death and disability in trauma patients. The presentation of TBI varies from mild alterations of consciousness to a comatose state and death. However, despite the existence of many classification systems, the simplest includes mild, moderate, and severe TBI, in which the nature of the injury and the impact on the patient's clinical condition is considered. In the last decade, a clear trend has been demonstrated towards deterioration in patients with severe TBI, in which the whole brain is affected precisely because of the characteristics and degree of injury. This deterioration may be associated with a loss of autoregulation due to the lack of reactivity of cerebral vascular pressure, resulting in hyperemia, interstitial edema and subsequent intracranial hypertension (ICH). Normal intracranial pressure in adults is less than 15 mm Hg, values that remain above 20 mm Hg are considered pathological and are an indication for intensified treatment in patients with TBI. It is important to consider that ICH can result from primary injury (hematoma expansion) or secondary damage (water accumulation, impaired autoregulation, ischemia, and contusion expansion). This is associated with high mortality rates, so multiple early, stepwise, and rescue management strategies have been proposed for its control, which is aimed at preventing secondary injury by avoiding hypotension, hypoxia and maintaining adequate cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). Targeted treatment is essential and may include cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage, use of hyperosmolar therapies, induction of hypothermia, hyperventilation, administration of barbiturates, or performance of decompressive surgery. Therapeutic hypothermia (TH) is one of the few neuroprotectants that has moved from preclinical work to clinical use. For example, it was previously used to prevent brain damage during cardiac surgical procedures, but more recently it has also been used to improve both neurological and physical outHypothermia for the Management of Intracranial Hypertension in Severe Brain Trauma: The Paradigm is Broken?