17 research outputs found

    Comparison of cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen, blood flow, and bispectral index under general anesthesia

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    Cerebral blood flow; Diffuse optics; Propofol-induced anesthesiaFlujo sanguíneo cerebral; Óptica difusa; Anestesia inducida por propofolFlux sanguini cerebral; Òptica difusa; Anestèsia induïda per propofolSignificance The optical measurement of cerebral oxygen metabolism was evaluated. Aim Compare optically derived cerebral signals to the electroencephalographic bispectral index (BIS) sensors to monitor propofol-induced anesthesia during surgery. Approach Relative cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (rCMRO2) and blood flow (rCBF) were measured by time-resolved and diffuse correlation spectroscopies. Changes were tested against the relative BIS (rBIS) ones. The synchronism in the changes was also assessed by the R-Pearson correlation. Results In 23 measurements, optically derived signals showed significant changes in agreement with rBIS: during propofol induction, rBIS decreased by 67% [interquartile ranges (IQR) 62% to 71%], rCMRO2 by 33% (IQR 18% to 46%), and rCBF by 28% (IQR 10% to 37%). During recovery, a significant increase was observed for rBIS (48%, IQR 38% to 55%), rCMRO2 (29%, IQR 17% to 39%), and rCBF (30%, IQR 10% to 44%). The significance and direction of the changes subject-by-subject were tested: the coupling between the rBIS, rCMRO2, and rCBF was witnessed in the majority of the cases (14/18 and 12/18 for rCBF and 19/21 and 13/18 for rCMRO2 in the initial and final part, respectively). These changes were also correlated in time (R > 0.69 to R = 1, p-values < 0.05). Conclusions Optics can reliably monitor rCMRO2 in such conditions.This work received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 675332 (BitMap), No. 101016087 (VASCOVID) and No. 101017113 (TinyBRAINS), KidsBrainIT (ERA-NET NEURON), FEDER EC and LASERLAB-EUROPE V (EC H2020 no. 871124). It was also supported by Fundació CELLEX Barcelona, Fundació Mir-Puig the “Severo Ochoa” Programme for Centres of Excellence in R&D (SEV-2015-0522), the Obra social “la Caixa” Foundation (LlumMedBcn), Generalitat de Catalunya (CERCA, AGAUR-2017-SGR-1380, RIS3CAT-001-P-001682 CECH), la Fundació La Marató de TV3 (201724.31 and 201709.31), and by Agencia Estatal de Investigación (PHOTOMETABO, PID2019-106481RB-C31/10.13039/501100011033)

    Variation in neurosurgical management of traumatic brain injury

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    Background: Neurosurgical management of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is challenging, with only low-quality evidence. We aimed to explore differences in neurosurgical strategies for TBI across Europe. Methods: A survey was sent to 68 centers participating in the Collaborative European Neurotrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) study. The questionnaire contained 21 questions, including the decision when to operate (or not) on traumatic acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) and intracerebral hematoma (ICH), and when to perform a decompressive craniectomy (DC) in raised intracranial pressure (ICP). Results: The survey was completed by 68 centers (100%). On average, 10 neurosurgeons work in each trauma center. In all centers, a neurosurgeon was available within 30 min. Forty percent of responders reported a thickness or volume threshold for evacuation of an ASDH. Most responders (78%) decide on a primary DC in evacuating an ASDH during the operation, when swelling is present. For ICH, 3% would perform an evacuation directly to prevent secondary deterioration and 66% only in case of clinical deterioration. Most respondents (91%) reported to consider a DC for refractory high ICP. The reported cut-off ICP for DC in refractory high ICP, however, differed: 60% uses 25 mmHg, 18% 30 mmHg, and 17% 20 mmHg. Treatment strategies varied substantially between regions, specifically for the threshold for ASDH surgery and DC for refractory raised ICP. Also within center variation was present: 31% reported variation within the hospital for inserting an ICP monitor and 43% for evacuating mass lesions. Conclusion: Despite a homogeneous organization, considerable practice variation exists of neurosurgical strategies for TBI in Europe. These results provide an incentive for comparative effectiveness research to determine elements of effective neurosurgical care

    Actualizaciones en los métodos de monitorización cerebral regional en los pacientes neurocríticos: presión tisular de oxígeno, microdiálisis cerebral y técnicas de espectroscopía por infrarrojos

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    El resultado final de los pacientes que han presentado un traumatismo craneoencefálico (TCE) depende de las lesiones primarias, pero también, y en gran medida, de las lesiones secundarias. El diagnóstico de un gran número de lesiones secundarias, y en especial de la isquemia cerebral, se centra en la monitorización simultánea de diversas variables encefálicas y sistémicas. En el momento actual, la monitorización continua de la presión intracraneal (PIC) se considera una medida indispensable en el manejo de los pacientes con un TCE grave que presentan cualquier tipo de lesión intracraneal. Sin embargo, la información que ofrece esta variable es insuficiente para diagnosticar los complejos procesos fisiopatológicos que caracterizan a las lesiones neurotraumáticas. Por ello, cada vez es más frecuente complementar la neuromonitorización de los pacientes con un TCE con métodos de estimación del flujo sanguíneo cerebral (FSC) como el Doppler transcraneal o las técnicas de oximetría yugular. Sin embargo, en el momento actual y en la cabecera del paciente, el conocimiento de la repercusión de las lesiones tisulares y de las medidas terapéuticas sobre el metabolismo cerebral requiere un acceso directo al parénquima encefálico. En esta revisión nos centraremos en tres métodos de monitorización cerebral ¿regional¿: la presión tisular de oxígeno, la microdiálisis cerebral y las técnicas transcutáneas de espectroscopía por infrarrojos. En cada caso se expondrán los fundamentos del método en cuestión, los valores de referencia de los parámetros monitorizados y una serie de recomendaciones sobre cómo pueden interpretarse sus resultados a la luz de los conocimientos actuales.El resultado final de los pacientes que han presentado un traumatismo craneoencefálico (TCE) depende de las lesiones primarias, pero también, y en gran medida, de las lesiones secundarias. El diagnóstico de un gran número de lesiones secundarias, y en especial de la isquemia cerebral, se centra en la monitorización simultánea de diversas variables encefálicas y sistémicas. En el momento actual, la monitorización continua de la presión intracraneal (PIC) se considera una medida indispensable en el manejo de los pacientes con un TCE grave que presentan cualquier tipo de lesión intracraneal. Sin embargo, la información que ofrece esta variable es insuficiente para diagnosticar los complejos procesos fisiopatológicos que caracterizan a las lesiones neurotraumáticas. Por ello, cada vez es más frecuente complementar la neuromonitorización de los pacientes con un TCE con métodos de estimación del flujo sanguíneo cerebral (FSC) como el Doppler transcraneal o las técnicas de oximetría yugular. Sin embargo, en el momento actual y en la cabecera del paciente, el conocimiento de la repercusión de las lesiones tisulares y de las medidas terapéuticas sobre el metabolismo cerebral requiere un acceso directo al parénquima encefálico. En esta revisión nos centraremos en tres métodos de monitorización cerebral ¿regional¿: la presión tisular de oxígeno, la microdiálisis cerebral y las técnicas transcutáneas de espectroscopía por infrarrojos. En cada caso se expondrán los fundamentos del método en cuestión, los valores de referencia de los parámetros monitorizados y una serie de recomendaciones sobre cómo pueden interpretarse sus resultados a la luz de los conocimientos actuales

    The Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT2) for evaluating civilian mild traumatic brain injury. A pilot normative study

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    Self-report measures, particularly symptom inventories, are critical tools for identifying patients with persistent post-concussion symptoms and their follow-up. Unlike in military or sports-related assessment, in general civilian settings pre-injury levels of concussion-like symptoms are lacking. Normative data are available in adolescent and college populations, but no reference data exist to guide clinical adult explorations. The purpose of this study was to use the second edition of the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT2) to profile a cohort of 60 healthy community volunteers who had not sustained a head injury. Participating volunteers underwent MRI scanning and were evaluated with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Participants reported a median of 3 concussion-like symptoms and the 97.5 percentile score was found at 10.5 symptoms, out of a total of 22. The median severity score was 4.9 points, and 28.9 was the upper limit of the reference interval. Only 10 participants (16.7%) did not endorse any symptom. The most frequently endorsed symptom was feeling difficulty in concentrating, with 41.7% of the sample reporting it. Age, sex and general distress, anxiety and depressive symptoms were not associated with concussion-like symptoms. Our data yielded elevated cut-offs scores for both the number of symptoms and the symptom severity. In conclusion, postconcussive-like symptoms are frequent in the general non-concussed adult population and it should be taken into account in any future models developed for screening patients at risk of developing physical, cognitive, and psychological complaints following mild traumatic injury

    The Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT2) for evaluating civilian mild traumatic brain injury. A pilot normative study.

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    Self-report measures, particularly symptom inventories, are critical tools for identifying patients with persistent post-concussion symptoms and their follow-up. Unlike in military or sports-related assessment, in general civilian settings pre-injury levels of concussion-like symptoms are lacking. Normative data are available in adolescent and college populations, but no reference data exist to guide clinical adult explorations. The purpose of this study was to use the second edition of the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT2) to profile a cohort of 60 healthy community volunteers who had not sustained a head injury. Participating volunteers underwent MRI scanning and were evaluated with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Participants reported a median of 3 concussion-like symptoms and the 97.5 percentile score was found at 10.5 symptoms, out of a total of 22. The median severity score was 4.9 points, and 28.9 was the upper limit of the reference interval. Only 10 participants (16.7%) did not endorse any symptom. The most frequently endorsed symptom was feeling difficulty in concentrating, with 41.7% of the sample reporting it. Age, sex and general distress, anxiety and depressive symptoms were not associated with concussion-like symptoms. Our data yielded elevated cut-offs scores for both the number of symptoms and the symptom severity. In conclusion, postconcussive-like symptoms are frequent in the general non-concussed adult population and it should be taken into account in any future models developed for screening patients at risk of developing physical, cognitive, and psychological complaints following mild traumatic injury

    Traumatic brain injury : integrated approaches to improve prevention, clinical care, and research

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    Rahul Raj on työryhmän InTBIR Participants Investigators jäsen.Peer reviewe
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