Neurocritical care
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Comparative Study
Safety of a DVT chemoprophylaxis protocol following traumatic brain injury: a single center quality improvement initiative.
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a complication that affects approximately 30 % of moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients when pharmacologic prophylaxis is not used. Following TBI, specifically in the case of contusions, the safety and efficacy of pharmacologic thromboembolism prophylaxis (PTP) has been studied only in small sample sizes. In this study, we attempt to assess the safety and efficacy of a PTP protocol for TBI patients, as a quality improvement (QI) initiative, in the neuroscience intensive care unit (NSICU). ⋯ A PTP protocol in the NSICU is useful in controlling the number of complications from DVT and pulmonary embolism while avoiding additional IH. This protocol, based on a published body of literature, allowed for VTE rates similar to published rates, while having no PTP-related hemorrhage expansion. The protocol significantly changed physician behavior, increasing the percentage of patients receiving PTP during their hospitalization; whether long-term patient outcomes are affected is a potential goal for future study.
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Case Reports
Continuous electroencephalography (cEEG) changes precede clinical changes in a case of progressive cerebral edema.
Continuous electroencephalogram (cEEG) is tightly linked to cerebral metabolism and is sensitive to cerebral ischemia and hypoxia. The severity of cerebral ischemia can be seen on cEEG as changes in morphology, amplitude, or frequency, and cEEG may detect neuronal dysfunction at a reversible stage. ⋯ cEEG has applications in monitoring cerebral dysfunction in addition to detecting seizure activity in the intensive care unit. It may serve a vital role in multi-modality monitoring for early recognition of neurological complications from brain injuries that may not be noticed clinically, which is paramount to early intervention.
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As part of the development of the Neurocritical Care Society (NCS) Status Epilepticus (SE) Guidelines, the NCS SE Writing Committee conducted an international survey of SE experts. ⋯ There is close agreement between the recently published NCS guideline for SE and this survey of experts in the treatment of SE.
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Review
Protocol management of severe traumatic brain injury in intensive care units: a systematic review.
To examine clinical trials and observational studies that compared use of management protocols (MPs) versus usual care for adult intensive care unit (ICU) patients with acute severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) on 6-month neurologic outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale, GOS) and mortality, major electronic databases were searched from 1950 to April 18, 2011. Abstracts from major international meetings were searched to identify gray literature. A total of 6,151 articles were identified; 488 were reviewed in full and 13 studies were included. ⋯ Sources of heterogeneity included variation in study design, methodological quality, MP design, MP neurophysiologic endpoints, and type of ICU. MPs for severe TBI were associated with reductions in death and improved neurologic outcome. Although no definitive conclusions about the efficacy of MPs for severe TBI can be drawn from our study, these results should encourage the conduct of randomized controlled trials to more rigorously examine the efficacy of MPs for severe TBI.