Experience with prolonged induced hypothermia in severe head injury
نویسندگان
چکیده
BACKGROUND: Recent prospective controlled trials of induced moderate hypothermia (32-34 degrees C) for relatively short periods (24-48 h) in patients with severe head injury have suggested improvement in intracranial pressure control and outcome. It is possible that increased benefit might be achieved if hypothermia was maintained for more periods longer than 48 h, but there is little in the literature on the effects of prolonged moderate hypothermia in adults with severe head injury. We used moderate induced hypothermia (30-33 degrees C) in 43 patients with severe head injury for prolonged periods (mean 8 days, range 2-19 days). RESULTS: Although nosocomial pneumonia (defined in this study as both new chest radiograph changes and culture of a respiratory pathogen from tracheal aspirate) was quite common (45%), death from sepsis was rare (5%). Other findings included hypokalaemia on induction of hypothermia and a decreasing total white cell and platelet count over 10 days. There were no major cardiac arrhythmias. There was a satisfactory neurological outcome in 20 out of 43 patients (47%). CONCLUSION: Moderate hypothermia may be induced for more prolonged periods, and is a relatively safe and feasible therapeutic option in the treatment of selected patients with severe traumatic brain injury. Thus, further prospective controlled trials using induced hypothermia for longer periods than 48 h are warranted.
منابع مشابه
Experience with prolonged induced hypothermia in severe head injury
Reports of the use of hypothermia as a treatment for brain injury appeared as early as 1943. Fay [1] cooled a series of patients with severe traumatic brain injury to as low as 28°C for 4–7 days and described outcomes that were, in his view, better than expected. This and subsequent reports did describe several deaths related to cooling, however, presumably as a result of cardiac arrhythmias an...
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Study selection and assessment: randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that compared mild therapeutic hypothermia (local or systemic therapeutic cooling [using a fluid filled cooling blanket, a ‘‘Bear Hugger’’ air cooling device, ice water lavage, or combination, or other method] to a target temperature (34– 35 C̊ for >12 hours beginning on admission to the intensive care unit or when intracranial ...
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OBJECTIVE To review human thermoregulation and the pathophysiology and management of induced and accidental hypothermia. DATA SOURCES A review of studies reported over ten years from 1990 to 2000 and identified through a MEDLINE search of the English-language literature on thermoregulation and induced and accidental hypothermia. SUMMARY OF REVIEW Hypothermia is defined as a core temperature...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Critical Care
دوره 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1999