Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Mar 2002
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialHypothermia on admission in patients with severe brain injury.
Data from the "National Acute Brain Injury Study: Hypothermia" were examined to identify the impact of hypothermia on admission. In all patients, temperature was measured at randomization using bladder catheters with thermistors. Patients assigned to hypothermia were cooled using fluid-circulating pads. ⋯ Patients who were hypothermic on admission, age < or = 45 years (n = 81), and assigned to hypothermia had a significantly lower percentage of poor outcomes than those assigned to normothermia (hypothermia, 52%; normothermia, 76%; p = 0.02). Factors associated with hypothermia on admission were increased age, prehospital hypotension, smaller size, positive blood alcohol, larger volume of pre-hospital fluids, slightly higher injury severity, and winter enrollment The treatment effect was found in all of the four centers, which randomized the majority (80%) of the patients. It is unclear whether the improved outcome when hypothermia is maintained is a beneficial effect of very early hypothermia induction or an adverse effect of permitting the patients to rewarm passively.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2000
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialCHOP Infant Coma Scale ("Infant Face Scale"): a novel coma scale for children less than two years of age.
The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is the most frequently used tool worldwide for assessing the severity of neurologic injury after brain trauma, although applying this scale to infants and younger children can be problematic. The CHOP Infant Coma Scale, or Infant Face Scale (IFS), is a novel scale for children under 2 years of age which differs from other pediatric coma scales in the following ways: (1) it relies on objective behavioral observations; (2) it assesses cortical as well as brainstem function; (3) it parallels the GCS in scoring but is based on infant-appropriate behaviors; and (4) it can be applied to intubated patients. We report the results of a prospective study designed to compare interrater reliability between the IFS and GCS in children less than 2 years of age. ⋯ When applied to infants in an intensive care unit with acute traumatic brain injury or hypoxia/ischemia, the GCS interrater reliability scores were in the "fair" range, while the IFS scores were in the "almost perfect" range. The IFS demonstrates improved interrater reliability in direct comparison to the GCS, particularly in the "verbal/face" component where most pediatric coma scales are deficient. The IFS may prove to be a simple and practical bedside index of brain injury severity in children less than two years of age.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jun 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialEffects of the bradykinin antagonist Bradycor (deltibant, CP-1027) in severe traumatic brain injury: results of a multi-center, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. American Brain Injury Consortium Study Group.
A phase II prospective, randomized, double blind clinical trial of Bradycor, a bradykinin antagonist, was conducted at 31 centers within North America in severely brain injured patients. Patients of Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) 3-8 (n = 139) with at least one reactive pupil were randomized to receive either Bradycor, 3 microg/kg/min or placebo as a continuous intravenous infusion for 5 days, with the infusion beginning within 12 h of the injury. The primary objective was to assess the efficacy of a continuous infusion of Bradycor (3.0 mc/kg/min) in preventing elevation of intracranial pressure (ICP). ⋯ There were fewer deaths in the Bradycor group, which had a 28-day all cause mortality of 20% versus 27% on placebo. Patients treated with Bradycor showed a 10.3% improvement in favorable outcome at 3 months and a 12% improvement in dichotomized GOS at 6 months (p = 0.26). The consistent positive trends seen in ICP, TIL, neuropsychological tests, and, most importantly, 3- and 6-month GOS provide supportive evidence that a bradykinin antagonist may play a neuroprotective role in severe brain injury.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialA phase II study of moderate hypothermia in severe brain injury.
Forty-six patients with severe nonpenetrating brain injury [Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) 4-7] were randomized to standard management at 37 degrees C (n = 22) and to standard management with systemic hypothermia to 32 to 33 degrees C (n = 24). The two groups were balanced in terms of age (Wilcoxon's rank sum test, p > 0.95), randomizing GCS (chi-square test, p = 0.54), and primary diagnosis. Cooling was begun within 6 h of injury by use of cooling blankets. ⋯ Sepsis was seen more commonly in the hypothermia group, but difference was not statistically significant (chi-square test). Mean Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) score at 3 months after injury showed an absolute increase of 16% (i.e., 36.4-52.2%) in the number of patients in the Good Recovery/Moderate Disability (GR/MD) category as compared with Severe Disability/Vegetative/Dead (SD/V/D) (chi-square test, p > 0.287). Based on evidence of improved neurologic outcome with minimal toxicity, we believe that phase III testing of moderate systemic hypothermia in patients with severe head injury is warranted.
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Journal of neurotrauma · May 1992
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialSystemic hypothermia in treatment of brain injury.
An extensive literature suggests that there are minimal complications of systemic hypothermia in humans at and above 30 degrees C for periods of several days. Intracranial hemorrhage has been found to complicate profound hypothermia (10-15 degrees C), and ventricular arrhythmias occur at temperatures below 30 degrees C. Our initial clinical studies were with 21 patients undergoing elective craniotomy cooled to 30-32 degrees C for 1-8 h (mean 4 h). ⋯ No intracranial hemorrhage or other complications were found. With surface cooling, intravascular temperature dropped at 1.6 degrees C/h. Based on the safety of surface cooling to a core temperature of 32 degrees C for 48 h, we are conducting a randomized study of this level of hypothermia in patients with severe brain injury, cooled within 6 h of injury.