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- A W Unterberg, K L Kiening, R Härtl, T Bardt, A S Sarrafzadeh, and W R Lanksch.
- Virchow Medical Center, Department of Neurosurgery, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany.
- J Trauma. 1997 May 1;42(5 Suppl):S32-7.
BackgroundRecently, invasive intensive care unit monitoring of cerebral oxygenation has become feasible. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of standard therapeutic interventions used in the treatment of intracranial hypertension on cerebral oxygenation and other physiologic parameters in comatose patients.MethodsIn the neurosurgical intensive care unit, Ptio2, and jugular bulb oxygen saturation (Sjvo2), arterial blood pressure, intracranial pressure (ICP), and cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) were prospectively studied (0.1 Hz acquisition rate) with a multimodal monitoring system in 21 patients with severe traumatic brain injury during various treatment modalities: dopamine and mannitol infusion, head positioning, and induced arterial hypocapnia.ResultsFor baseline CPP values below 40 mm Hg, dopamine infusion was more effective in decreasing ICP and improving Ptio2 and Sjvo2 than for initial CPP values above 60 mm Hg. Treatment with mannitol, although improving CPP and lowering ICP, did not affect Ptio2 and Sjvo2. CPP in this group, however, was always above 60 mm Hg. Forced hyperventilation to an end-tidal Pco2 of 21 mm Hg normalized ICP and CPP, but significantly reduced cerebral oxygenation.ConclusionA CPP > 60 mm Hg emerges as the crucial factor guaranteeing sufficient brain oxygenation. Any intervention used to further elevate CPP does not improve cerebral oxygenation, to the contrary, forced hyperventilation even bears the risk of inducing brain ischemia.
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