Literature DB >> 15287454

A pilot trial comparing cerebral perfusion pressure-targeted therapy to intracranial pressure-targeted therapy in children with severe traumatic brain injury.

Priya Prabhakaran1, Alyssa T Reddy, W Jerry Oakes, William D King, Margaret K Winkler, Timothy G Givens.   

Abstract

OBJECT: The authors sought to compare cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP)- with intracranial pressure (ICP)-targeted therapy in children with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI).
METHODS: A randomized controlled trial was developed to assess CPP and ICP therapies in 17 children (range 15 months-15 years of age) with poststabilization Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores of less than or equal to 8 who were admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit at a Level I trauma center. Goals in the ICP group were to maintain ICP lower than 20 mm Hg and CPP higher than 50 mm Hg. In the CPP group, goals were to maintain CPP higher than 70 mm Hg for patients at least 2 years old and higher than 60 mm Hg for patients younger than 2 years of age. The study outcomes were death or functional outcome at 1 year postinjury. The median GCS scores in the CPP group (12 patients) and the ICP group (five patients) were 6 and 7, respectively. In the CPP group, two patients died, one was lost to follow up, four were unimpaired, and five had mild impairment. In the ICP group, all patients survived; one was lost to follow up, two had mild impairment, and two had hemiparesis and moderate impairment. There were four unimpaired survivors in the CPP arm compared with none in the ICP arm (p = 0.08).
CONCLUSIONS: The CPP method appears to be safe, although this feasibility study does not establish that the CPP therapy is superior to ICP therapy.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15287454     DOI: 10.3171/ped.2004.100.5.0454

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0022-3085            Impact factor:   5.115


  13 in total

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2.  Severe traumatic brain injury in children--a single center experience regarding therapy and long-term outcome.

Authors:  Ulrich-Wilhelm Thomale; Daniela Graetz; Peter Vajkoczy; Asita S Sarrafzadeh
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3.  Brain tissue oxygen tension monitoring in pediatric severe traumatic brain injury. Part 2: Relationship with clinical, physiological, and treatment factors.

Authors:  Anthony A Figaji; Eugene Zwane; Crispin Thompson; A Graham Fieggen; Andrew C Argent; Peter D Le Roux; Jonathan C Peter
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4.  Establishing a Clinically Relevant Large Animal Model Platform for TBI Therapy Development: Using Cyclosporin A as a Case Study.

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7.  ICP and CPP: excellent predictors of long term outcome in severely brain injured children.

Authors:  B G Carter; W Butt; A Taylor
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Review 8.  The role for osmotic agents in children with acute encephalopathies: a systematic review.

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9.  Age-specific cerebral perfusion pressure thresholds and survival in children and adolescents with severe traumatic brain injury*.

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Review 10.  Elevation of the head during intensive care management in people with severe traumatic brain injury.

Authors:  Jose D Alarcon; Andres M Rubiano; David O Okonkwo; Jairo Alarcón; Maria José Martinez-Zapata; Gerard Urrútia; Xavier Bonfill Cosp
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2017-12-28
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