| Literature DB >> 31965267 |
Randall Chesnut1,2, Sergio Aguilera3,4, Andras Buki5,6, Eileen Bulger7, Giuseppe Citerio8,9, D Jamie Cooper10,11, Ramon Diaz Arrastia12, Michael Diringer13, Anthony Figaji14, Guoyi Gao15, Romer Geocadin16, Jamshid Ghajar17, Odette Harris18, Alan Hoffer19, Peter Hutchinson20, Mathew Joseph21, Ryan Kitagawa22, Geoffrey Manley23, Stephan Mayer24, David K Menon25, Geert Meyfroidt26, Daniel B Michael27, Mauro Oddo28, David Okonkwo29, Mayur Patel30, Claudia Robertson31, Jeffrey V Rosenfeld32,33, Andres M Rubiano34,35, Juan Sahuquillo36, Franco Servadei37,38, Lori Shutter39, Deborah Stein40, Nino Stocchetti41,42, Fabio Silvio Taccone43, Shelly Timmons44, Eve Tsai45, Jamie S Ullman46, Paul Vespa47, Walter Videtta48, David W Wright49, Christopher Zammit50, Gregory W J Hawryluk51.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current guidelines for the treatment of adult severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI) consist of high-quality evidence reports, but they are no longer accompanied by management protocols, as these require expert opinion to bridge the gap between published evidence and patient care. We aimed to establish a modern sTBI protocol for adult patients with both intracranial pressure (ICP) and brain oxygen monitors in place.Entities:
Keywords: Algorithm; Brain injury; Brain oxygen; Consensus; Head trauma; Intracranial pressure; PbtO2; Protocol; SIBICC; Seattle; Tiers
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31965267 PMCID: PMC7210240 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-019-05900-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Consensus-based basic severe traumatic brain injury care for patients with an ICP and brain oxygen monitor in situ. These are basic treatments recommended as fundamental to the care of patients with sTBI, to be initiated (“Expected interventions”) or considered (“Recommended interventions”) upon ICU admission of a patient with both an ICP and brain oxygen monitor, regardless of the measured values. CO2 carbon dioxide, CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, Hg hemoglobin, HOB head of bed, ICP intracranial pressure, ICU intensive care unit, spO2 arterial oxygen saturation
Treatment NOT recommended for use in the management of severe traumatic brain injury (when both ICP and PbtO2 are monitored)
| Mannitol by non-bolus continuous intravenous infusion |
| Scheduled infusion of hyperosmolar therapy (e.g., every 4–6 h) |
| Lumbar CSF drainage |
| Furosemide |
| Routine use of steroids |
| Routine use of therapeutic hypothermia to temperatures below 35 °C due to systemic complications |
| High-dose propofol to attempt burst suppression |
| Decreasing PaCO2 below 30 mmHg/4.0 kPa |
| Routinely raising CPP above 90 mmHg |
| Barbiturates as treatment for low PbtO2 unless barbiturates are otherwise indicated |
| Hypothermia as treatment for low PbtO2 unless hypothermia is otherwise indicated |
| Hypercarbia in “type D” patients |
CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, ICP intracranial pressure, kPa kiloPascals, PCO arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide, PO brain tissue partial pressure of oxygen
Fig. 2This matrix provides the schema for the 4 clinical conditions encountered in patients with both ICP and brain oxygen monitors in situ. Type A reflects normal values for both monitors and does not require treatment. Type B involves ICP elevation but normal brain oxygen values; we propose a distinct treatment algorithm for such patients than in those with ICP elevation and unknown PbtO2 values. Type C patients have hypoxic brains but normal ICP and Type D patients have both brain hypoxia and ICP elevation. An ICP of 22 mmHg discriminates normal (lower) and abnormal (higher) values while PbtO2 values of 20 mmHg discriminates normal (higher) and abnormal (lower) values. ICP intracranial pressure, PbtO2 partial pressure of brain oxygen
Fig. 3Consensus-based algorithm for the management of severe traumatic brain injury with intracranial hypertension and normal brain oxygenation. Lower tier treatments are viewed as having a more favorable side effect profile than higher tiers and generally should be employed first. Inter-tier recommendations encourage patient reassessment for remediable causes of treatment resistance. See text for details. CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, EEG electroencephalogram, EVD external ventricular drain, ICP intracranial pressure, kPa kiloPascals, MAP mean arterial pressure, PaCO2 arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide
Fig. 4Consensus-based algorithm for the management of severe traumatic brain injury with brain hypoxia and normal intracranial pressure. Lower tier treatments are viewed as having a more favorable side effect profile than higher tiers and generally should be employed first. Inter-tier recommendations encourage patient reassessment for remediable causes of treatment resistance. See text for details. CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, EEG electroencephalogram, EVD external ventricular drain, ICP intracranial pressure, kPa kiloPascals, MAP mean arterial pressure, PaCO2 arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide
Fig. 5Consensus-based algorithm for the management of severe traumatic brain injury with intracranial hypertension and brain hypoxia. Lower tier treatments are viewed as having a more favorable side effect profile than higher tiers and generally should be employed first. Inter-tier recommendations encourage patient reassessment for remediable causes of treatment resistance. See text for details. CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, EEG electroencephalogram, EVD external ventricular drain, ICP intracranial pressure, kPa kiloPascals, MAP mean arterial pressure, PaCO2 arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide
Fig. 6Critical neuroworsening and its management. SIBICC definition (upper box), response (middle box) and a list of suggested differential diagnoses (bottom) surrounding critical neurological deterioration (critical neuroworsening). CNS central nervous system, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, ICP intracranial pressure