• Acta Neurochir. Suppl. · Jan 2005

    Controlled Clinical Trial

    Balance of risk of therapeutic hypothermia.

    • S Hayashi, M Takayasu, S Inao, J Yoshida, and Nagoya Therapeutic Hypothermia Study Group.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Nagoya First Red Cross Hospital, Nagoya, Japan. hayashi1216@yahoo.co.jp
    • Acta Neurochir. Suppl. 2005 Jan 1;95:269-72.

    AbstractThe complications of therapeutic hypothermia sometimes undermine its clinical effects. In this study we investigated the efficacy and safety of therapeutic hypothermia based on analysis of 20 severe head injury cases from 6 institutions treated with therapeutic hypothermia in 1999. The twenty patients with severe head injury were enrolled prospectively based on the following indications; Glasgow Coma Scale of 7 or less on admission, age 60 or younger, and systric BP over 100 mmHg. A control group consisting of 21 patients with severe head injury met the same criteria but were treated without therapeutic hypothermia in other institutions. Clinical benefit were evaluated by a comparison of clinical result in the two groups defined according to the Glasgow Outcome Scale six months after injury. The hypothermia group was divided into two groups based on a target temperature [mild hypothermia group: 32-34 degrees C (n = 10); very mild hypothermia group: 35-36 degrees C (n = 10)]. The complication rate, clinical results and the duration of therapeutic hypothermia were analyzed between two groups. In the hypothermia group, 12 patients obtained a favorable outcome (Good Recovery or Moderate Disabled in GOS) and the mortality rate was 35%. In the control group, however only 5 patients had a favorable outcome and the mortality rate was 57%. Comparison between mild hypothermia and very mild hypothermia groups revealed no difference in clinical outcome. In the hypothermia group, severe pneumonia was seen in three patients, all in the mild hypothermia group with a hypothermic duration of over 120 hours. Mild hypothermia should be ended within 120 hours to avoid severe complication. When long-lasting therapeutic hypothermia of more than 120 hours is planned, very mild hypothermia is the treatment of choice.

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