| Literature DB >> 24381049 |
Hanna Algattas1, Jason H Huang2.
Abstract
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) affects a large proportion and extensive array of individuals in the population. While precise pathological mechanisms are lacking, the growing base of knowledge concerning TBI has put increased emphasis on its understanding and treatment. Most treatments of TBI are aimed at ameliorating secondary insults arising from the injury; these insults can be characterized with respect to time post-injury, including early, intermediate, and late pathological changes. Early pathological responses are due to energy depletion and cell death secondary to excitotoxicity, the intermediate phase is characterized by neuroinflammation and the late stage by increased susceptibility to seizures and epilepsy. Current treatments of TBI have been tailored to these distinct pathological stages with some overlap. Many prophylactic, pharmacologic, and surgical treatments are used post-TBI to halt the progression of these pathologic reactions. In the present review, we discuss the mechanisms of the pathological hallmarks of TBI and both current and novel treatments which target the respective pathways.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24381049 PMCID: PMC3907812 DOI: 10.3390/ijms15010309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Prophylactic Hypothermia Evidence in Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). Table 1 summarizes results of evidence regarding the effect of prophylactic hypothermia on various outcomes. The selected results contain mixed results regarding the effectiveness of TBI.
| Study | Design | Primary Outcome | Results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bukur | Retrospective | Spontaneous admission hypothermia on mortality | Pre-hospital hypothermia associated with increased mortality (Adjusted OR = 2.5) | 95% CI = 1.1–6.3 |
| Rubiano | Secondary analysis of Pennsylvania Trauma Outcome Study (PTOS) | Spontaneous admission hypothermia on mortality | Odds of death increased in spontaneous hypothermia group (OR = 1.70) | 95% CI = 1.50–1.93 |
| Clifton | Randomized controlled trial (RCT); National Acute Brain Injury Study: Hypothermia II (NABIS: H II) | Glasgow outcome scale (GOS) at 6 months post-injury | GOS nor mortality significantly differed between hypothermia and normothermia groups | Cooled to 33 °C for 48 h and rewarmed 0.5 °C every 2 h. |
| Suehiro | Retrospective analysis of Japan Neurotrauma Data Bank Project (2009) | GOS | Hypothermia group had significantly more favorable outcomes compared with normothermia and no temperature management groups | Favorable outcomes—hypothermia (52.4%), normothermia (26.9%), No temperature management (20.7%) |
| Zhao | Prospective randomized trial | GOS | Hypothermia group had improved outcome (75.0%) compared to normothermia (51.2%) |
= Study as cited in text.
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Evidence in TBI. Table 2 summarizes varied evidence regarding the use of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) in the treatment of TBI and its effect on various primary outcomes. The selected evidence displays mixed results concerning the therapeutic benefit of HBOT.
| Study | Design | Primary Outcome | Results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| McDonagh | Systematic review | Study outcome | Two studies demonstrated a benefit to HBOT. Five observational studies did not yield effective evidence | |
| Sahni | Retrospective | Rancho Los Amigos Scale (RLAS) | Improved cognitive function in HBOT group (RLAS) | HBOT and standard treatment groups each had 20 patients |
| Lin | Prospective randomized trial | GCS GOS | HBOT group had higher GCS improvement ( | HBOT and standard treatment groups each had 22 patients. GCS and GOS measured before HBOT and 3–6 months after |
| Rockswold | Phase II RCT | Sliding dichotomized GOS and mortality | 26% reduction in mortality ( | Treatment group given HBOT for 60 min at 1.5 atm followed by normobaric hyperoxia (3 h of 100% O2 at 1.0 atm) |
| Rockswold | Prospective randomized trial | Metabolic markers (CSF lactate, cerebral metabolic rate of O2) | Reduced lactate and increased cerebral metabolic rate of O2 across both groups | Compared HBOT to normobaric hyperoxia (NBH) |
= Study as cited in text.
Progesterone Administration Evidence in TBI. Table 3 summarizes presented evidence regarding the effect of progesterone administration on TBI outcomes, including GOS and mortality. Most of evidence presented favors the use of progesterone based on multiple different outcomes.
| Study | Design | Primary Outcome | Results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wright | Phase II RCT with placebo | GOS-extended adverse events 30 day mortality | Progesterone and placebo group had similar adverse event rates. Progesterone had lower 30 day mortality. Moderate TBI patients receiving progesterone more likely to have improved outcome | Three days progesterone treatment 30 day mortality Rate ratio (RR) in progesterone group = 0.43 95% CI = 0.18–0.99 |
| Shakeri | Prospective randomized trial | GOS | Significantly improved GOS and recovery in progesterone group (50%) compared to control (21%) at 3 months | 1 mg/kg progesterone every 12 h for 5 days; Patients with GCS ≤ 8 enrolled |
| Ma | Meta-analysis | Mortality | Progesterone reduced mortality at end of follow-up and disability | Mortality with progesterone pooled risk ratio = 0.61, 95% CI = 0.40–0.93 |
| Aminmansour | RCT with placebo | GOS | Favorable Outcomes at 3 months Placebo = 25% | Separate group receiving progesterone and vitamin D included |
= Study as cited in text.
Hyperosmolar Agents Evidence in TBI. Table 4 summarizes selected evidence regarding hyperosmolar agents in TBI. The evidence compares the use of hypertonic saline (HS) and mannitol in reducing ICP during neuroinflammation. Mannitol is the gold standard hyperosmolar agent recommended for use by the BTF. However, the evidence provides strong support in favor of HS.
| Study | Design | Primary Outcome | Results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rickard | Meta-analysis | Pooled mean ICP reduction | Weighted mean ICP reduction difference with hypertonic saline compared mannitol = 1.39 mmHg, 95% CI = −0.74–3.53 | Six studies with 171 patients and 599 episodes of raised ICP included |
| Ichai | RCT receving either half-molar sodium lactate (SL) or isotonic saline | Raised ICP episodes (≥20 mmHg) | Half-molar SL group had significantly fewer raised ICP episodes compared to control ( | Patients received 48 h continuous infusion (0.5 mL/kg/h) |
| Eskandari | Prospective cohort study | Refractory intracranial hypertension treatment response | Boluses significantly decreased ICP and sustained the decrease and elevated CPP | Using 14.6% Hypertonic Saline Boluses repeated every 15 min. over 12 h |
| Oddo | Prospective study | Elevated ICP refractory to mannitol—Response to hypertonic saline (HS) | HS significantly elevated brain tissue oxygenation, reduced ICP, and elevated cardiac output compared to mannitol | 7.5%, 250 mL HS treatment |
| Cottenceau | Randomized prospective study | ICP, CPP, CBF, outcome | Mannitol and HS both reduced ICP and elevated CPP and CBF. HS had significantly more pronounced effect over greater duration. No difference in outcome between two groups | 20% Mannitol (4 mL/kg) |
= Study as cited in text.
Anti-Epileptic Drugs Evidence in TBI: Case for Levetiracetam. Table 5 displays selected evidence regarding the use of levetiracetam (LEV) in preventing seizures post-TBI, often as compared to phenytoin (PHT). PHT is the mainstay treatment for seizure prophylaxis as recommended by the BTF. Many studies display similar results on seizure prevention concerning LEV and PHT. However, LEV may be more clinically practical than PHT.
| Study | Design | Primary Outcome | Results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pearl | Phase II prospective trial | Posttraumatic epilepsy (PTE) development sdverse events mortality | 1/40 patients developed PTE. Non-serious adverse events: headache, fatigue, irritability, drowsiness. No mortality at follow-up | Children 6–17 years LEV 55 mg/kg/day for 30 day. 2 year follow-up |
| Zafar | Meta-analysis | seizures between LEV and PHT | Neither drug was superior to the other in reducing seizures | Pooled OR = 0.96 95% CI = 0.24–3.79 |
| Kruer | retrospective observational study | posttraumatic seizures | 89 received PHT, 20 received LEV. 1 patient suffered a seizure in each group | Most patients had AED prophylaxis for >7 days despite guidelines |
| Szaflarski | Prospective, randomized, single-blind trial PHT | GOS disability rating scale (DRS) seizures mortality | LEV had lower DRS ( | DRS completed at 3 months, GOS at 6 months. Continuous EEG used to measure seizure occurrence over initial 72 h. |
| Inaba | Prospective study PHT | Early post-traumatic seizures mortality | No difference between LEV and PHT in seizure rate (1.5% | LEV: 1,000 mg every 12 h; PHT: loading dose 20 mg/kg, maintenance dose 5 mg/kg/d rounded to nearest 100 mg. |
= Study as cited in text.
Figure 1.TBI pathologic process and treatment targets.