Neurocritical care
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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Older adults represent an understudied and growing TBI population. Current Brain Trauma Foundation guidelines support prophylactic antiseizure medication (ASM) administration to reduce the risk of early posttraumatic seizures (within 7 days of injury) in patients with severe TBI. Whether ASM decreases mortality or early seizure risk in this population remains unclear. This study addresses the knowledge gap regarding the impact of ASM administration on the risk of seizure or mortality after TBI in patients more than 65 years of age. ⋯ Early ASM administration was associated with reduced mortality at 7 days, 30 days, and 1 year but did not decrease the risk of early seizures among older adults who presented with TBI at an ICU. This benefit was observed in mild, moderate, and severe TBI assessed by Glasgow Coma Score on presentation among patients 65 years old and older and suggests broader recommendations for the use of ASM in older adults who present with TBI of any severity at an ICU.
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In response to concerns about the declaration of death by neurologic criteria, the Uniform Law Commission created a drafting committee to update the Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) in the Fall of 2021. One of the key questions for the committee to address was the following: Should the revised UDDA address objections to the use of neurologic criteria to declare death? This article (1) provides historical background and survey results that demonstrate the need to address this question; (2) summarizes the ethical principles that support and oppose accommodation of objections to the use of neurologic criteria to declare death; (3) reviews accommodation in other areas of medicine and law; (4) discusses existing legal and hospital guidance on management of these objections; (5) examines perspectives of stakeholder medical societies and expert health care professionals, lawyers, ethicists, and philosophers on whether the revised UDDA should address these objections; (6) identifies some questions for the drafting committee to consider when deciding whether the revised UDDA should address objections to the use of neurologic criteria to declare death; and (7) summarizes the potential downstream effects of the drafting committee's decision.
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Acute blood pressure (BP) management in neurologic patients is paramount. Different neurologic emergencies dictate various BP goals. There remains a lack of literature determining the optimal BP regimen regarding safety and efficacy. The objective of this study was to identify which intravenous antihypertensive is the most effective and safest for acute BP management in neurologic emergencies. ⋯ Because of the very low quality of evidence, an optimal BP agent for the treatment of patients with neurologic emergencies was unable to be determined. Future randomized controlled trials are needed to compare the most promising agents.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Predicting Gastrostomy Tube Placement After Intracerebral Hemorrhage: External Validation of the GRAVo Score.
Dysphagia is a common consequence of intracerebral hemorrhages (ICH). It can lead to enduring impairments of dietary intake and the requirement for feeding via percutaneous gastrostomy (PEG) tubes. However, variabilities in the course of swallowing recovery after ICH make it difficult to anticipate the need for PEG placement in an individual patient. A new tool called the GRAVo score was recently developed to predict PEG tube placement after an ICH but has not been externally validated. Our study aims were to externally validate the GRAVo score in a multicenter cohort and reexamine the role of race in predicting PEG placement, given the uncertain biological plausibility for this relationship observed in the derivation cohort. ⋯ The results of our external validation demonstrate the validity of GRAVo scores for predicting PEG tube placement after an ICH. However, its performance was more modest compared with that of the derivation cohort. Inclusion of the race variable had no measurable effect on model performance. Differences in patient characteristics between these cohorts may have influenced our results. These findings should be taken into consideration when using the GRAVo score to assist clinical decision making on PEG placement after an ICH.