• Neurocritical care · Aug 2011

    The effect of decompressive hemicraniectomy on brain temperature after severe brain injury.

    • J Claude Hemphill, Kazuma Nakagawa, Geoffrey T Manley, Nancy K Hills, Hooman Kamel, Morabito, Diane, and Pratik V Patel.
    • Department of Neurovascular Service, University of California San Francisco, 505 Parnassus Avenue, M-830, San Francisco, CA 94143-0114, USA. kazuma.nakagawa@ucsfmedctr.org
    • Neurocrit Care. 2011 Aug 1;15(1):101-6.

    BackgroundAnimal studies have shown that even a small temperature elevation of 1°C can cause detrimental effects after brain injury. Since the skull acts as a potential thermal insulator, we hypothesized that decompressive hemicraniectomy facilitates surface cooling and lowers brain temperature.MethodsForty-eight patients with severe brain injury (TBI = 38, ICH = 10) with continuous brain temperature monitoring were retrospectively studied and grouped into "hemicraniectomy" (n = 20) or "no hemicraniectomy" (n = 28) group. The paired measurements of core body (T Core) and brain (T Br) temperature were recorded at 1-min intervals over 12 ± 7 days. As a surrogate measure for the extent of surface heat loss from the brain, ∆T Core-Br was calculated as the difference between T Core and T Br with each recording. In order to accommodate within-patient temperature correlations, mixed-model regression was used to assess the differences in ∆T Core-Br between those with and without hemicraniectomy, adjusted for core body temperature and diagnosis.ResultsA total of 295,883 temperature data pairs were collected (median [IQR] per patient: 5047 [3125-8457]). Baseline characteristics were similar for age, sex, diagnosis, incidence of sepsis, Glasgow Coma Scale score, ICU mortality, and ICU length of stay between the two groups. The mean difference in ∆T Core-Br was 1.29 ± 0.87°C for patients with and 0.80 ± 0.86°C for patients without hemicraniectomy (P < 0.0001). In mixed-model regression, accounting for temperature correlations within patients, hemicraniectomy and higher T Core were associated with greater ∆T Core-Br (hemicraniectomy: estimated effect = 0.60, P = 0.003; T Core: estimated effect = 0.21, P < 0.0001).ConclusionsHemicraniectomy is associated with modestly but significantly lower brain temperature relative to core body temperature.

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