Literature DB >> 11207351

Lack of effect of induction of hypothermia after acute brain injury.

G L Clifton1, E R Miller, S C Choi, H S Levin, S McCauley, K R Smith, J P Muizelaar, F C Wagner, D W Marion, T G Luerssen, R M Chesnut, M Schwartz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Induction of hypothermia in patients with brain injury was shown to improve outcomes in small clinical studies, but the results were not definitive. To study this issue, we conducted a multicenter trial comparing the effects of hypothermia with those of normothermia in patients with acute brain injury.
METHODS: The study subjects were 392 patients 16 to 65 years of age with coma after sustaining closed head injuries who were randomly assigned to be treated with hypothermia (body temperature, 33 degrees C), which was initiated within 6 hours after injury and maintained for 48 hours by means of surface cooling, or normothermia. All patients otherwise received standard treatment. The primary outcome measure was functional status six months after the injury.
RESULTS: The mean age of the patients and the type and severity of injury in the two treatment groups were similar. The mean (+/-SD) time from injury to randomization was 4.3+/-1.1 hours in the hypothermia group and 4.1+/-1.2 hours in the normothermia group, and the mean time from injury to the achievement of the target temperature of 33 degrees C in the hypothermia group was 8.4+/-3.0 hours. The outcome was poor (defined as severe disability, a vegetative state, or death) in 57 percent of the patients in both groups. Mortality was 28 percent in the hypothermia group and 27 percent in the normothermia group (P=0.79). The patients in the hypothermia group had more hospital days with complications than the patients in the normothermia group. Fewer patients in the hypothermia group had high intracranial pressure than in the normothermia group.
CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with hypothermia, with the body temperature reaching 33 degrees C within eight hours after injury, is not effective in improving outcomes in patients with severe brain injury.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11207351     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM200102223440803

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  209 in total

1.  Clinical studies in severe traumatic brain injury: a controversial issue.

Authors:  Per-Olof Grände; Silvana Naredi
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2002-02-09       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 2.  Clinical trials in head injury.

Authors:  Raj K Narayan; Mary Ellen Michel; Beth Ansell; Alex Baethmann; Anat Biegon; Michael B Bracken; M Ross Bullock; Sung C Choi; Guy L Clifton; Charles F Contant; William M Coplin; W Dalton Dietrich; Jamshid Ghajar; Sean M Grady; Robert G Grossman; Edward D Hall; William Heetderks; David A Hovda; Jack Jallo; Russell L Katz; Nachshon Knoller; Patrick M Kochanek; Andrew I Maas; Jeannine Majde; Donald W Marion; Anthony Marmarou; Lawrence F Marshall; Tracy K McIntosh; Emmy Miller; Noel Mohberg; J Paul Muizelaar; Lawrence H Pitts; Peter Quinn; Gad Riesenfeld; Claudia S Robertson; Kenneth I Strauss; Graham Teasdale; Nancy Temkin; Ronald Tuma; Charles Wade; Michael D Walker; Michael Weinrich; John Whyte; Jack Wilberger; A Byron Young; Lorraine Yurkewicz
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6.  Hypothermia for neuroprotection after cardiac arrest.

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7.  Induced hypothermia in traumatic brain injury: considering the conflicting results of meta-analyses and moving forward.

Authors:  Kees H Polderman; E Wesley Ely; Ahmed E Badr; Armand R J Girbes
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2004-07-13       Impact factor: 17.440

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Authors:  Gary H Danton; W Dalton Dietrich
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Review 9.  Therapeutic hypothermia for acute neurological injuries.

Authors:  Lucia Rivera-Lara; Jiaying Zhang; Susanne Muehlschlegel
Journal:  Neurotherapeutics       Date:  2012-01       Impact factor: 7.620

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