• Critical care medicine · Sep 1998

    Relationship of brain tissue PO2 to outcome after severe head injury.

    • A B Valadka, S P Gopinath, C F Contant, M Uzura, and C S Robertson.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030-2706, USA.
    • Crit. Care Med. 1998 Sep 1;26(9):1576-81.

    ObjectiveTo determine thresholds of brain tissue PO2 (PbtO2) that are critical for survival after severe head injury.DesignProspective data collection.SettingNeurosurgical intensive care unit of Ben Taub General Hospital, a comprehensive academic neurosurgical facility and Level I trauma center.PatientsForty-three severely head-injured patients who were not obeying commands on presentation or whose condition deteriorated to this level shortly after admission.InterventionsIntracerebral placement of Licox (n=39) or Paratrend (n=4) PO2 probes during craniotomy or in the intensive care unit.Measurements And Main ResultsPbtO2 monitoring continued for an average of 84.6+/-41.8 hrs. The probes were calibrated before insertion according to the manufacturer's specifications. After removal, probes were tested in room air and in blood gas standard calibration solutions. PbtO2 data were analyzed by comparing the average time that PbtO2 was below the values of 20, 15, 10, 8, 6, 4, and 2 torr (2.7, 2.0, 1.3, 1.0, 0.8, 0.5, and 0.3 kPa, respectively) in patients who were living 3 mos after injury vs. those who died. A Tobit regression analysis using maximum likelihood methods was utilized. Both Licox and Paratrend probes functioned well in room air and in the Level I control. However, in the zero-oxygen solution, the Paratrend probes gave an average reading of 7.0+/-1.4 torr (0.9+/-0.2 kPa), compared with 0.3+/-0.3 torr (0.04+/-0.04 kPa) for the Licox probes.ConclusionsAnalysis of the PbtO2 monitoring data suggested that the likelihood of death increased with increasing duration of time at or below a PbtO2 of 15 torr (2.0 kPa) or with the occurrence of any PbtO2 values of < or =6 torr (< or =0.8 kPa).

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