• Journal of neurosurgery · Aug 1998

    Selection of severely head injured patients for mild hypothermia therapy.

    • T Shiozaki, H Sugimoto, M Taneda, J Oda, H Tanaka, A Hiraide, and T Shimazu.
    • Department of Traumatology, Osaka University Medical School, Japan.
    • J. Neurosurg. 1998 Aug 1;89(2):206-11.

    ObjectThe authors have analyzed the efficacy of inducing mild hypothermia (34 degrees C) in 62 severely head injured patients to control fulminant intracranial hypertension.MethodsAll 62 patients fulfilled the following criteria: 1)persistent intracranial pressure (ICP) greater than 20 mm Hg despite fluid restriction, hyperventilation, and high-dose barbiturate therapy; 2) an ICP lower than the mean arterial pressure; and 3) a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score of 8 or less on admission. The patients were divided into three groups based on computerized tomography findings: extracerebral hematoma (34 patients with subdural and/or epidural hematoma), focal cerebral lesion (20 patients with localized brain contusion and/or intracerebral hematoma), and diffuse swelling (eight patients with no focal mass lesion). Mild hypothermia prevented ICP elevation in 35 (56.5%) of the 62 patients whose ICP was greater than 20 mm Hg despite conventional therapies. Among those 35 patients whose ICP was controlled by mild hypothermia, 12 (34.3%) achieved functional recovery (good outcome or moderate disability). However, functional recovery was observed in only five (10.9%) of the 46 patients whose ICP was greater than 40 mm Hg after conventional therapies. Of 40 patients with an admission GCS score of 5 to 8, there were 11 (27.5%) who achieved functional recovery. On the contrary, mild hypothermia was not effective in 22 patients with an admission GCS score of 3 or 4. In the patients with focal cerebral lesions, ICP was controlled by mild hypothermia in 17 patients (85%) and patient outcome was intimately related to the extent of the damage. Among 18 patients with extracerebral hematoma who had a midline shift of 9 to 12 mm, raised ICP could be successfully controlled by mild hypothermia in 16 patients (88.9%) and three (16.7%) achieved functional recovery. However, ICP could not be controlled in patients with extracerebral hematoma who had a midline shift of 13 mm or more. In patients with diffuse swelling, ICP elevation could not be prevented at all by mild hypothermia.ConclusionsThe authors conclude that mild hypothermia is effective for preventing ICP elevation in patients without diffuse brain swelling in whom ICP remains higher than 20 mm Hg but less than 40 mm Hg after conventional therapies.

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