Annales françaises d'anesthèsie et de rèanimation
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Jun 2012
Review[Near infrared spectroscopy monitoring in the neurointensive care].
Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) can noninvasively measure cerebral saturation in oxygen, that permits to estimate brain oxygenation and metabolism. This technique could be incorporated into a multimodal monitoring for severely brain-injured patients. This review presents the principles of NIRS, its limits, the main results from clinical studies and its perspectives. More clinical studies are needed before recommending the routine use of NIRS in the ICU.
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The clinical importance of cardiovascular consequences resulting from cerebral injury has long been recognized. However, interactions between the brain and the cardiovascular system remain poorly defined and their importance for the management of patients suffering from acute brain injury is largely underestimated. This should have profound consequences on treatment strategies during anaesthesia and intensive cares of these patients, taking into account not only brain perfusion, but also cardiovascular optimisation. This report summarizes the main data available regarding the cardiovascular consequences of brain death, traumatic brain injury, stroke and epilepsy.
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Jun 2012
Review[Pituitary insufficiency after traumatic brain injury: consequences? Screening?].
Traumatic brain injury has been considered for long as a rare cause of hypopituitarism. Recent studies have already shown a prevalence of 30% of pituitary dysfunction following moderate or severe head injury that may persist into the chronic phase of recovery, hypogonadism and GH deficiency being the most common hormonal deficiencies. ⋯ However, there are limited data available regarding the impact of hypopituitarism, and the indications of hormonal replacement (especially GH replacement and hypogonadism treatment) still remain to be defined. The screening strategy for TBI - induced hypopituitarism has recently been revised.
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The identification of nutritional status is one of the objectives of the anaesthesia consultation often difficult to achieve routinely. It usually requires the use of multiple indicators, which are complex for a non-nutrition specialist. ⋯ To facilitate this evaluation, we propose a stratification of nutritional risk in four grades (NG) using three types of simple and validated parameters: preoperative nutritional status (BMI, weight loss, eventually serum albumin), comorbidities and kind of surgery. This stratification can develop a tailored nutritional care for each patient.
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Although surgery of brain tumors and epilepsy are restricted to few specialized centers, anaesthesia for a patient with epilepsy is commonly encountered. Surgical treatments of epilepsy are currently soaring due to the lack of significant progress about effectiveness of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). ⋯ Practically, the risk of severe perioperative complications is low, provided that the administration of AEDs is kept as close as possible to its usual dosage, and that metabolic disturbances are prevented. The main anaesthetic drugs to avoid are alfentanil, remifentanil and sevoflurane, although their contraindication are only relative, since the clinical benefit might be clear and the doses should remain moderate.