25 research outputs found

    Management of Traumatic Brain Injury: Application of Guidelines for Diagnostics and Therapy

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    In the past years several recommendations have been published concerning the diagnostic work-up and treatment of patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). They show that with regard to the surgical management of acute epidural hematomas, acute subdural hematomas, traumatic parenchymal lesions, posterior fossa mass lesions, as well as depressed skull fractures there is a lack of controlled studies, which would allow to define standards of treatment or guidelines, respectively. Nonetheless, treatment protocols serve an important purpose, because they may improve management of TBI patients by promoting uniform decision-making in the treatment of these patients, namely in • the identification of the few patients likely to suffer from complications among the large number of patients who sustain a mild to moderate head injury and • strategies for avoiding posttraumatic cerebral ischemia. In this context, the authors focus on the importance of plain skull X-rays and CT scan, respectively, in the work-up of mild TBI patients and on the indications for decompressive craniectomy for the relief of intractable elevation of intracranial pressure following severe TB

    Vasospastic Phenomena on the Luminal Replica of Rat Brain Vessels

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    Strikingly localized ring-like constrictions (other than sphincters, cushions and offshoot furrows) have appeared on the casted vessels of some of our preparations. Morphology of the phenomena reveals diverse degree of active contraction of the vessel wall, ranging from corrugation of the luminal surface to near severance of the acrylic cast. Distribution of the vasospastic phenomena reveals as particularly affected the arteries in the diameter range between 25 and 75 ÎĽm, that belong either to intra-arterial anastomoses between the branches of each of the three major cerebral arteries or to their terminal junctions in the border zones (inter-arterial anastomoses). Among the possible causes for the occurrence of the observed vasospasms, we indicate the susceptibility to raised intraluminal pressure during injection, producing contraction of the smooth muscle cell. Reactivity appears heightened in the anastomotic districts of the circulation. The evidence of so-called plastic strips clinging to constricted sections of affected vessels prompts re-examination of their proposed origin as plastic wrapping . Rather, they appear to be remnants of dynamic elements of the vascular wall (smooth muscle cells) that resisted corrosion

    The Capillary Bed in the Choroid Plexus of the Lateral Ventricles: A Study of Luminal Casts

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    Micro-angioarchitecture of the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricles is investigated in microcorrosion casts of animal and human preparations studied with the scanning electron microscope. The capillary bed in the diverse regions of the tissue belongs to one of three patterns: (1)-a network of capillary meshes that envelop the larger arteries and veins predominates in the central segment. (2)-in the villous regions a leaf-like organization of sinusoids is found together with (3)-fronds of glomerular formations. Glomeruli are formed when arterial afferents and venous efferents converge in a quasi hilar structure before branching in arterio-venous loops. Nodular thickenings are observed on glomerular capillaries The preparations studied (rat, dog, human) are remarkably similar and differ mostly in degree of occurrence of common architectural patterns. Arterio-venous communications are found at the hilus of human glomerular formations

    Management of traumatic brain injury

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    In the past years several recommendations have been published concerning the diagnostic work-up and treatment of patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). They show that with regard to the surgical management of acute epidural hematomas, acute subdural hematomas, traumatic parenchymal lesions, posterior fossa mass lesions, as well as depressed skull fractures there is a lack of controlled studies, which would allow to define standards of treatment or guidelines, respectively. Nonetheless, treatment protocols serve an important purpose, because they may improve management of TBI patients by promoting uniform decision-making in the treatment of these patients, namely in • the identification of the few patients likely to suffer from complications among the large number of patients who sustain a mild to moderate head injury and • strategies for avoiding posttraumatic cerebral ischemia. In this context, the authors focus on the importance of plain skull X-rays and CT scan, respectively, in the work-up of mild TBI patients and on the indications for decompressive craniectomy for the relief of intractable elevation of intracranial pressure following severe TB

    Endovascular cooling with heat exchange catheters: a new method to induce and maintain hypothermia

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    Objective: To test the convenience of a new cooling technique with intravenous heat exchange catheters. Design: Retrospective chart review. Setting: University hospital neurointensive care unit. Patients: Twenty patients with severe subarachnoid hemorrhage Hunt and Hess Grade 3-5 treated with mild hypothermia. Interventions: Cooling to reach target body core temperature (33 degrees C-34 degrees C) was induced as quickly as possible in all patients. In the first ten patients (group one) moderate hypothermia was induced and maintained using cooling blankets. In group two, an 8.5F heat exchange catheter was placed central venous and temperature-adjusted normal saline circulated in a closed-loop system entailing two balloons. Measurements and results: A total of 2,007 values of body core temperature (BCT) were registered every hour. Foley temperature catheters were used for monitoring BCT in the bladder. The time to reach the target BCT and the stability of temperature during hypothermia were compared between the two groups. No specific complications associated with the new cooling device were observed. Time to reach the target temperature in group two was significantly shorter than in group one (190+/-110 and 370+/-220 min) ( P=0.023). In group one significantly more temperature values were out of the target range (127 of 792 values; 16.0%) than in group two (62 of 1,215 values; 5.1%) ( P<0.0001). Conclusions: The new endovascular cooling technique seems to be superior for rapid induction of hypothermia and maintaining a more stable temperature than the cooling techniques using blankets and ice bags

    Management of Traumatic Brain Injury

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    Long-Term Hypothermia in Patients with Severe Brain Edema After Poor-Grade Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Feasibility and Intensive Care Complications

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    The purpose was to evaluate the feasibility and intensive care complications of long-term hypothermia (>72 hours) in the treatment of severe brain edema after poor-grade subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) Hunt and Hess grade 4 to 5. Among 156 patients with SAH, 21 patients were treated with mild hypothermia (33.0 to 34.0 degrees C) combined with barbiturate coma because of severe brain edema and elevated intracranial pressure (>15 mm Hg) after early aneurysm clipping. Hypothermia was sustained for at least 24 hours after maintaining an intracranial pressure of 72 hours (group 2: mean 153.9 hours, range 78-400 hours). Three patients (14%) died during the hypothermia treatment. Good functional outcome after 3 months (Glasgow Outcome Score 4-5) was achieved in 10 patients (48%). The outcome did not differ between the two groups. All patients developed severe infections. In group 2 the mean value of minimal leukocyte counts during hypothermia was significantly lower (6.9 vs. 11.8 x 109/L; P = 0.001), and thrombocytopenia (<150 x 109/L) occurred significantly more often (48 vs. 33%; P = 0.032). In 48% of patients with poor-grade SAH, good functional outcome was achieved with combined mild hypothermia and barbiturate coma after early aneurysm surgery. This may be a feasible treatment even for longer than 72 hours. All patients developed severe infections as potentially hazardous side effects. To determine whether mild hypothermia alone is effective in the treatment of severe SAH patients, controlled studies to compare the effects of barbiturate coma alone, mild hypothermia alone, and combined barbiturate coma with hypothermia are needed

    Detectable concentrations of Fas ligand in cerebrospinal fluid after severe head injury

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    When the cell surface molecule Fas is triggered by its agonist Fas ligand the result is apoptosis of these cells and tissue destruction. To elucidate the pathophysiological relevance of Fas ligand in patients with cerebral oedema caused by trauma, we examined its concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid in 18 patients using specific ELISA. Serum and cerebrospinal fluid from healthy people and injured patients without head trauma did not contain detectable Fas ligand. In contrast, cerebrospinal fluid from patients with severe brain injury contained high concentrations of Fas ligand without detectable concentrations in serum. Soluble Fas ligand concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid correlated significantly with severity of brain injury. The Fas-Fas ligand-system may have a pivotal role in causing oedema and local tissue destruction in the brain after severe head injury
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