Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 1986
CSF brain creatine kinase levels and lactic acidosis in severe head injury.
The posttraumatic creatine kinase-BB isoenzyme (CKBB) activity and lactate concentration in ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have been studied in 29 patients with severe head injuries. The CKBB activity reaches its maximum a few hours after trauma, and has a monoexponential drop with a half-time of approximately 10 hours. ⋯ Thus, increase of lactate in the ventricular CSF is not, like CKBB, a direct one-stage consequence of the trauma but is due to continuous production from a derangement of metabolism caused by the trauma. Since even higher ventricular CSF lactate levels can be survived when not caused by head injury, and since no significant pH changes were related to the ventricular CSF lactic acidosis in these artificially ventilated patients, it is concluded that ventricular CSF lactic acidosis is indicative of a severe, although not necessarily intractable, disturbance of brain function associated with intracellular lactate production and acidosis.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Nov 1986
Prognostic significance of ventricular CSF lactic acidosis in severe head injury.
Brain-tissue acidosis inferred by cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactic acidosis is considered to play an important role in the clinical course of severe head injury. Ventricular CSF lactate concentration was studied in 19 patients during the first 5 days after severe head injury. All patients were intubated, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated so that PaCO2 was kept at 33.2 +/- 5.0 mm Hg and PaO2 at 122 +/- 18 mm Hg (mean +/- standard deviation). ⋯ High ventricular CSF lactate concentration is present within 18 hours after severe head injury. Its decrease to normal in the following 48 hours is a reliable sign of clinical improvement; however, ventricular CSF lactate levels that are persistently high or that increase over time indicate the patient's deterioration. Serial assessment of ventricular CSF for acid-base status and metabolites in head-injured patients with a ventricular catheter already placed for ICP monitoring is useful in the evaluation of prognosis and clinical course.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 1986
California Association of Neurological Surgeons' Emergency Services Committee report: guidelines for establishment of trauma centers.
The CANS supports the concept of organized neurological trauma care consisting of an appropriate amalgamation of prepared communities, institutions, and adequate numbers of committed neurosurgeons. It further supports the guidelines of the ACS regarding institutions designated to receive trauma cases. ⋯ It supports the concept of prehospital triage of trauma victims as conducted by well-trained field personnel and reasonable triage criteria agreed upon by the local neurosurgical community. It further supports audit systems that include neurosurgeons to assess and improve the quality of neurosurgical care.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Oct 1986
A frameless stereotaxic integration of computerized tomographic imaging and the operating microscope.
A computer-based system has been developed for the integration and display of computerized tomography (CT) image data in the operating microscope in the correct perspective without requiring a stereotaxic frame. Spatial registration of the CT image data is accomplished by determination of the position of the operating microscope as its focal point is brought to each of three CT-imaged fiducial markers on the scalp. Monitoring of subsequent microscope positions allows appropriate reformatting of CT data into a common coordinate system. ⋯ The CT data are reformatted into a plane and orientation corresponding to the microscope's focal plane or to a deeper parallel plane if required. This reformatted information is then projected into the optics of the operating microscope using a miniature cathode ray tube and a beam splitter. The operating surgeon sees the CT information (such as a tumor boundary) superimposed upon the operating field in proper position, orientation, and scale.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Aug 1986
Neurosurgical complications after apparently minor head injury. Assessment of risk in a series of 610 patients.
A small number of patients with an apparently minor head injury will develop a life-threatening intracranial hematoma that must be rapidly detected and removed. To assess the risk of a significant intracranial neurosurgical complication after apparently minor head injury, the authors collected data prospectively on 610 patients who had sustained a transient posttraumatic loss of consciousness or other neurological function and who had a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score of 13, 14, or 15 in the emergency room. Skull x-ray films were obtained in 583 patients, 66 of whom (10.8% of the study population) had cranial fractures. ⋯ Second, an abnormal skull x-ray film increases by a factor of 20 the probability that a patient will need neurosurgical treatment. Third, it is very unusual for patients who have a GCS score of 15 and a normal skull x-ray film to have a significant neurosurgical complication. Fourth, the alternative management schemes that depend on selective use of skull films and CT scans may significantly reduce the cost of caring for patients with minor head injury.