• Critical care medicine · Feb 1996

    Review

    Resuscitation from severe brain trauma.

    • H L Rosomoff, P M Kochanek, R Clark, S T DeKosky, U Ebmeyer, A N Grenvik, D W Marion, W Obrist, A M Palmer, P Safer, and R J White.
    • Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Miami School of Medicine, FL 33139, USA.
    • Crit. Care Med. 1996 Feb 1;24(2 Suppl):S48-56.

    AbstractSevere traumatic brain injuries are extremely heterogeneous. At least seven of the secondary derangements in the brain that have been identified as occurring after most traumatic brain injuries also occur after cardiac arrest. These secondary derangements include posttraumatic brain ischemia. In addition, traumatic brain injury causes insults not present after cardiac arrest, i.e., mechanical tissue injury (including axonal injury and hemorrhages), followed by inflammation, brain swelling, and brain herniation. Brain herniation, in the absence of a mass lesion, is due to a still-to-be-clarified mix of edema and increased cerebral blood flow and blood volume. Glutamate release immediately after traumatic brain injury is proven. Late excitotoxicity needs exploration. Inflammation is a trigger for repair mechanisms. In the 1950s and 1960s, traumatic brain injury with coma was treated empirically with prolonged moderate hypothermia and intracranial pressure monitoring and control. Moderate hypothermia (30 degrees to 32 degrees C), but not mild hypothermia, can help prevent increases in intracranial pressure. How to achieve optimized hypothermia and rewarming without delayed brain herniation remains a challenge for research. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) damage and triggering of programmed cell death (apoptosis) by trauma deserve exploration. Rodent models of cortical contusion are being used effectively to clarify the molecular and cellular responses of brain tissue to trauma and to study axonal and dendritic injury. However, in order to optimize therapeutic manipulations of posttraumatic intracranial dynamics and solve the problem of brain herniation, it may be necessary to use traumatic brain injury models in large animals (e.g., the dog), with long-term intensive care. Stepwise measures to prevent lethal brain swelling after traumatic brain injury need experimental exploration, based on the multifactorial mechanisms of brain swelling. Novel treatments have so far influenced primarily healthy tissue; future explorations should benefit damaged tissue in the penumbra zones and in remote brain regions. The prehospital arena is unexplored territory for traumatic brain injury research.

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