263 research outputs found
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Mononeuritis multiplex: an unexpectedly frequent feature of severe COVID-19
The prolonged mechanical ventilation that is often required by patients with severe COVID-19 is expected to result in significant Intensive Care Unit – Acquired Weakness (ICUAW) in many of the survivors. However, in our post-COVID-19 follow up clinic we have found that, as well as the anticipated global weakness related to loss of muscle mass, a significant proportion of these patients also have disabling focal neurological deficits relating to multiple axonal mononeuropathies. Amongst the 69 patients with severe COVID-19 that have been discharged from the intensive care units in our hospital, we have seen 11 individuals (16%) with such a mononeuritis multiplex. In many instances, the multi-focal nature of the weakness in these patients was initially unrecognised as symptoms were wrongly assumed to relate simply to “critical illness neuromyopathy”. While mononeuropathy is well recognised as an occasional complication of intensive care, our experience suggests that such deficits are surprisingly frequent and often disabling in patients recovering from severe COVID-19.Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Reseach Centr
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CT DENSITOMETRY TO PREDICT CONTUSION ENLARGEMENT IN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI)
What's in a number? Problems with counting traumatic brain injuries.
In perspective - No abstract available
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Contusion Progression Following Traumatic Brain Injury: A Review of Clinical and Radiological Predictors, and Influence on Outcome
Abstract: Secondary injuries remain an important cause of the morbidity and mortality associated with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Progression of cerebral contusions occurs in up to 75% of patients with TBI, and this contributes to subsequent clinical deterioration and requirement for surgical intervention. Despite this, the role of early clinical and radiological factors in predicting contusion progression remains relatively poorly defined due to studies investigating progression of all types of hemorrhagic injuries as a combined cohort. In this review, we summarize data from recent studies on factors which predict contusion progression, and the effect of contusion progression on clinical outcomes
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Pulmonary embolism following complex trauma: UK MTC observational study.
OBJECTIVES: To describe the incidence of pulmonary embolism (PE) in a critically ill UK major trauma centre (MTC) patient cohort. METHODS: A retrospective, multidataset descriptive study of all trauma patients requiring admission to level 2 or 3 care in the East of England MTC from 1 November 2014 to 1 May 2017. Data describing demographics, the nature and extent of injuries, process of care, timing of PE prophylaxis, tranexamic acid (TXA) administration and CT scanner type were extracted from the Trauma Audit and Research Network database and hospital electronic records. PE presentation was categorised as immediate (diagnosed on initial trauma scan), early (within 72 hours of admission but not present initially) and late (diagnosed after 72 hours). RESULTS: Of the 2746 trauma patients, 1039 were identified as being admitted to level 2 or 3 care. Forty-eight patients (4.6%) were diagnosed with PE during admission with 14 immediate PEs (1.3%). Of 32.1% patients given TXA, 6.3% developed PE compared with 3.8% without TXA (p=0.08). CONCLUSION: This is the largest study of the incidence of PE in UK MTC patients and describes the greatest number of immediate PEs in a civilian complex trauma population to date. Immediate PEs are a rare phenomenon whose clinical importance remains unclear. Tranexamic acid was not significantly associated with an increase in PE in this population following its introduction into the UK trauma care system
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The neurological sequelae of pandemics and epidemics
Funder: NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (GB)Funder: University of CambridgeAbstract: Neurological manifestations in pandemics frequently cause short and long-term consequences which are frequently overlooked. Despite advances in the treatment of infectious diseases, nervous system involvement remains a challenge, with limited treatments often available. The under-recognition of neurological manifestations may lead to an increase in the burden of acute disease as well as secondary complications with long-term consequences. Nervous system infection or dysfunction during pandemics is common and its enduring consequences, especially among vulnerable populations, are frequently forgotten. An improved understanding the possible mechanisms of neurological damage during epidemics, and increased recognition of the possible manifestations is fundamental to bring insights when dealing with future outbreaks. To reverse this gap in knowledge, we reviewed all the pandemics, large and important epidemics of human history in which neurological manifestations are evident, and described the possible physiological processes that leads to the adverse sequelae caused or triggered by those pathogens
Multiclass semantic segmentation and quantification of traumatic brain injury lesions on head CT using deep learning: an algorithm development and multicentre validation study
Background: Computed tomography (CT) is the most common imaging modality in traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, its conventional use requires expert clinical interpretation and does not provide detailed quantitative outputs, which may have prognostic importance. Deep learning could reliably and efficiently detect, distinguish, and quantify different lesion types, providing opportunities for personalised treatment strategies and clinical research.
Methods: An initial convolutional neural network (CNN) was trained and validated on expert manual segmentations (97 scans). This CNN was then used to automatically segment a new set of 839 scans, which were then manually corrected by experts. From these, a subset of 184 scans was used to train a final CNN for multi-class, voxel-wise segmentation of lesion types. The performance of this CNN was evaluated on a held-out test set with 655 scans. External validation was performed on a large, independent set of 500 patients from a different continent.
Findings: When compared to manual reference, CNN-derived lesion volumes showed a mean error of 0·86mL (95% CI -5·23 to 6·94) for intraparenchymal haemorrhage (IPH), 1·83mL (-12·01 to 15·66) for extra-axial haemorrhage (EAH), 2·09mL (-9·38 to 13·56) for perilesional oedema and 0·07mL (-1·00 to 1·13) for intraventricular haemorrhage (IVH). Further, the CNN detected lesions with AUCs of 0·90 (0·86-0·94) for IPH, 0·80 (0·75-0·85) for EAH, 0·95 (0·89-1·00) for IVH on the external, independent patient dataset.
Interpretation: We demonstrate the ability of a CNN to separately segment, detect and quantify multi-class haemorrhagic lesions and importantly, perilesional oedema. These volumetric lesion estimates allow clinically relevant quantification of lesion burden and progression, with potential applications in clinical care and research in TBI.
Funding: European Union 7th Framework Programme, Hannelore Kohl Stiftung; OneMind; Integra Neurosciences; European Research Council Horizon 2020; Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK); Academy of Medical Sciences/Health Foundation (UK); National Institute for Health Research (UK).CENTER-TBI study was supported by the European Union 7th Framework program (EC grant 602150). Additional funding sources: Hannelore Kohl Stiftung; NeuroTrauma Sciences; Integra Neurosciences; European Research Council (ERC) Horizon 2020 (EC grant 757173); Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) (EP/R511547/1); Academy of Medical Sciences/The Health Foundation (UK); National Institute for Health Research (UK)
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Neuroanatomical substrates of generalized brain dysfunction in COVID-19.
Central nervous system involvement is common in COVID-19, and may be driven by many mechanisms [1].
Reports of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in individual patients or small case series have
generally focused on discrete pathologies such as stroke or focal abnormalities. However, these reports do
not elucidate more generalized abnormalities of central nervous function, such as the alteration of mental
status in a third of patients [2], or quantitative imaging correlates of reported brainstem pathology [3].NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre.
Addenbrooke’s Charities Trust (ACT
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