Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Sep 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialThe use of moderate therapeutic hypothermia for patients with severe head injuries: a preliminary report.
Animal research suggests that moderate therapeutic hypothermia may improve outcome after a severe head injury, but its efficacy has not been established in humans. The authors randomly assigned 40 consecutively treated patients with a severe closed head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score 3 to 7) to either a hypothermia or a normothermia group. Using cooling blankets and cold saline gastric lavage, patients in the hypothermia group were cooled to 32 degrees to 33 degrees C (brain temperature) within a mean of 10 hours after injury, maintained at that temperature for 24 hours, and rewarmed to 37 degrees to 38 degrees C over 12 hours. ⋯ Both groups had a similar incidence of systemic complications, including cardiac arrhythmias, coagulopathies, and pulmonary complications. It is concluded that therapeutic moderate hypothermia is safe and has sustained favorable effects on acute derangements of cerebral physiology and metabolism caused by severe closed head injury. The trend toward better outcome with hypothermia may indicate that its beneficial physiological and metabolic effects limit secondary brain injury.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Sep 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEffect of mild hypothermia on uncontrollable intracranial hypertension after severe head injury.
Recent experimental studies have demonstrated that mild hypothermia at about 34 degrees C can be effective in the control of intracranial hypertension. A randomized controlled study of mild hypothermia was carried out in 33 severely head-injured patients. All patients fulfilled the following criteria: 1) persistent intracranial pressure (ICP) greater than 20 mm Hg despite fluid restriction, hyperventilation, and high-dose barbiturate therapy; 2) an ICP lower than the mean arterial blood pressure; and 3) a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 8 or less. ⋯ In five patients in the hypothermia group, cerebral blood flow was measured by the hydrogen clearance method and arteriojugular venous oxygen difference was evaluated before and during mild hypothermia. Mild hypothermia significantly decreased the cerebral blood flow, arteriojugular venous oxygen difference, and cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (p < 0.01). The results of this preliminary investigation suggest that mild hypothermia is a safe and effective method to control traumatic intracranial hypertension and to improve mortality and morbidity rates.