| Literature DB >> 29288841 |
Thomas Geeraerts1, Lionel Velly2, Lamine Abdennour3, Karim Asehnoune4, Gérard Audibert5, Pierre Bouzat6, Nicolas Bruder2, Romain Carrillon7, Vincent Cottenceau8, François Cotton9, Sonia Courtil-Teyssedre10, Claire Dahyot-Fizelier11, Frédéric Dailler7, Jean-Stéphane David12, Nicolas Engrand13, Dominique Fletcher14, Gilles Francony6, Laurent Gergelé15, Carole Ichai16, Étienne Javouhey10, Pierre-Etienne Leblanc17, Thomas Lieutaud18, Philippe Meyer19, Sébastien Mirek20, Gilles Orliaguet19, François Proust21, Hervé Quintard16, Catherine Ract17, Mohamed Srairi22, Karim Tazarourte23, Bernard Vigué17, Jean-François Payen6.
Abstract
The latest French Guidelines for the management in the first 24hours of patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) were published in 1998. Due to recent changes (intracerebral monitoring, cerebral perfusion pressure management, treatment of raised intracranial pressure), an update was required. Our objective has been to specify the significant developments since 1998. These guidelines were conducted by a group of experts for the French Society of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine (Société francaise d'anesthésie et de réanimation [SFAR]) in partnership with the Association de neuro-anesthésie-réanimation de langue française (ANARLF), The French Society of Emergency Medicine (Société française de médecine d'urgence (SFMU), the Société française de neurochirurgie (SFN), the Groupe francophone de réanimation et d'urgences pédiatriques (GFRUP) and the Association des anesthésistes-réanimateurs pédiatriques d'expression française (ADARPEF). The method used to elaborate these guidelines was the Grade® method. After two Delphi rounds, 32 recommendations were formally developed by the experts focusing on the evaluation the initial severity of traumatic brain injury, the modalities of prehospital management, imaging strategies, indications for neurosurgical interventions, sedation and analgesia, indications and modalities of cerebral monitoring, medical management of raised intracranial pressure, management of multiple trauma with severe traumatic brain injury, detection and prevention of post-traumatic epilepsia, biological homeostasis (osmolarity, glycaemia, adrenal axis) and paediatric specificities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29288841 DOI: 10.1016/j.accpm.2017.12.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anaesth Crit Care Pain Med ISSN: 2352-5568 Impact factor: 4.132