Traumatic Brain Injury



Traumatic Brain Injury


Todd W. Trask

Arthur L. Trask



When Dr. Rosner first published his recommendations that were to change the management of traumatic brain injury (TBI), he recommended using cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP = mean arterial pressure [MAP]—intracranial pressure [ICP]) as a better way to manage severe TBI patients than just using the level of ICP [1,2]. This was the beginning of the changes in TBI management. Dr. Marion and Spiegel have published the article “Changes in the Management of Severe TBI: 1991–1997” [3]. Recommendations to change severe TBI management, based on evidence, developed by The Brain Trauma Foundation, in combination with the Trauma committee of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS), the Congress of Neurological Surgeons (CNS), and AANS/CNS Joint Section on Neurotrauma & Critical Care have been updated several times with the latest version in 2007 [4]. Neurosurgeons were surveyed by the Brain Trauma Foundation in 1991 and 1997 to determine if they were changing their management of severe TBI patients. The use of steroids was significantly reduced from 1991 to 1997 and hyperventilation was also discontinued. In 2004, we published our results of an evidence-based medicine protocol [5]. Our results showed a decrease in hospital intensive care stay by 1.8 days (p = 0.021). The Glasgow Outcome Scores (GOS) of good or moderate from 1991 to 1995 were 43.3%. For the period 1997 to 2000, our patients’ GOS of good or moderate were 61.5% (p = < 0.001). The overall mortality rate decreased from 17.8% for the early group compared to 13.8% for the later group [6,7,8].

We recommend that the intensive (ICU) care of severe TBI patients be driven by institutional protocols developed by key participants, that is, ICU care providers, using current recommendations for managing these patients [4]. Each hospital has different approaches to critical care and the reason we suggest assembling this key group of individuals is to assure that the plan for care fits into the way things are done in each hospital.

Above all, we recommend an evidence-based approach to the care of these critically ill patients. New evidence will be presented each year and adopting what has high credibility to that protocol makes good sense. We recommend keeping a TBI patient database to know with certainty how your results compare with other trauma centers in the USA and the world. By having a TBI database, you might also consider doing a prospective study using different techniques for similar TBI problems or management [9,10,11,12,13].


Identification

Identification of severe traumatic brain injury requires two criteria to be met. First, the Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) must
be 8 or less. The GCS was first described in 1974 by Graham Teasdale and Bryan J. Jennett, professors of neurosurgery at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. In 1981, they approached F.A. Davis, the author of a textbook Management of Head Injuries who included the scoring system for identification of different levels of TBI.

The next criteria for a severe TBI is an abnormal brain computed tomography (CT) with findings such as contusion, hematoma, diffuse axonal injury (DAI), compressed basal cistern, subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), and/or other clear signs of brain injury. When only an abnormal GCS is present, it is possible to be due to something other than TBI. When an injured patient arrives in an emergency department (ED), these two assessments are done to identify a severe TBI patient. When these criteria are met, the patient should be moved to a Neurotrauma ICU, a part of the recognized Trauma Center, as soon as possible, provided other types of operative treatment are not more urgently needed. Placement of an intracranial pressure monitor should be considered in the multiple-injured TBI patient, simultaneously with the non-neurosurgical operative procedures.


Monitors

We recommend intracranial pressure (ICP) monitors for assessing the moment-to-moment status of your patient. Generally, a ventriculostomy type monitor is superior to an intraparenchymal (Bolt) monitor. The ventriculostomy can accurately determine the intracranial pressure but also allows the neurophysicians to drain cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The latest recommendation for ICP monitors is to have an electronic continuous record with instantaneous alerts for significant increases to allow immediate interventions per protocol. Many devices are available for measuring brain oxygen levels as well as oxygen from the jugular bulb. The value of these measurements is yet to be determined by the BTF and AANS [14,15,16,17,18,19].

An understanding of the Monro-Kellie doctrine is essential. In 1783, Alexander Monro deduced that the cranium was a “rigid box” filled with a “nearly incompressible brain” and that its total volume tends to remain constant. The doctrine states that any increase in the volume of the cranial contents (e.g., brain, blood, or cerebrospinal fluid), will elevate intracranial pressure. Furthermore, if one of these three elements increases in volume, it must occur at the expense of the volume of the other two elements. In 1824, George Kellie confirmed many of Monro’s early observations. If as a result of trauma a hematoma forms on the outside of the brain (epidural hematoma), under the dura (subdural hematoma), or within the brain itself, the space occupied by the hematoma must result in a commensurate decrease of the intracranial blood or CSF volume. Once these compensatory mechanisms are exhausted, intracranial pressure will rise rapidly, and brain herniation may occur. Cerebral edema can mimic an expanding mass lesion, with similar pathophysiology, and potential for the irreversible damage associated with uncal and/or tonsillar herniation (see graph in Fig. 162.1).

In general, the reaction to an intracranial mass or cerebral edema is to reduce the amount of venous blood and CSF within the skull. The body’s response to the injury is to keep the pressure inside the skull as close to normal as possible by reducing those volumes that can be reduced. When a sudden increase of ICP occurs and the patient has a ventriculostomy, the neurointensivist may drain additional CSF from this closed box. This in turn helps to keep the ICP under control while other measures are taken to reduce the ICP in a more lasting fashion. We will discuss more about this under patient management.






Figure 162.1. As the Monro-Kellie doctrine indicates, the skull is a closed box. When intracranial volume increases to the critical volume due to traumatic brain injury, that is, subdural hematoma (SDH), epidural hematoma (EDH), or massive cerebral edema, note the dramatic vertical increase in intracranial pressure. If this occurs and the volume is not reduced, brain herniation will occur.

The next consideration for the severe TBI patient is determining what other injuries the patient might have. A qualified trauma surgeon must be involved to assist the neurointensivist with the fluid/blood product management. For example, a patient with a class III anterior posterior pelvic fracture will lose huge amounts of blood even if managed by a trauma orthopedist with pelvic circumference reduction. This is an indication for a pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) (or one of the newer devices for monitoring pressures and cardiac output) to monitor the resuscitation as closely as possible. The goal is maintaining the patient’s systolic pressure at or above 90 torr. In the book, Management and Prognosis of Severe Traumatic Brain Injury, a joint project of the Brain Trauma Foundation and American Association of Neurological Surgeons, class two evidence states that allowing the systolic BP to drop below 90 torr will likely produce secondary brain injury. The BTF class two evidence criteria are clinical studies in which the data was collected prospectively or retrospective analyses that were based on clearly reliable data. Types of studies so classified include: observational studies, cohort studies, prevalence studies, and case control studies. Class two evidence shows that post injury hypotension has dramatic impact on the brain injury outcome. We recommend using the PAC data to assist in fluid/blood product management to maintain a PCWP between 10 to 15 mm Hg and a CI of 2.6 L per minute per m2. Invasive hemodynamic monitoring may also help avoid fluid overload and possibly associated increases in cerebral edema. A new monitoring device is now being evaluated for these multiply-injured patients. The use of The InSpectra™, StO2 Tissue Oxygenation Monitor will provide continuous, real-time information for perfusion status monitoring and a new hemodynamic parameter (StO2) to assist clinicians in the early detection of inadequate tissue perfusion (hypoperfusion). This device would noninvasively monitor hemodynamic status and tissue oxygenation, both of which are critical for severe TBI patients [19].

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Sep 5, 2016 | Posted by in CRITICAL CARE | Comments Off on Traumatic Brain Injury

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