Articles: treatment.
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Central cord syndrome (CCS) is expected to become the most common traumatic spinal cord injury, yet its optimal management remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate variability in nonoperative vs operative treatment for CCS between trauma centers in the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Program, identify patient- and hospital-level factors associated with treatment, and determine the association of treatment with outcomes. ⋯ Operative decision-making for CCS is influenced by patient factors. There remains substantial variability between trauma centers not explained by case-mix differences. Nonoperative treatment was associated with shorter hospital LOS and lesser inpatient morbidity.
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Observational Study
Etomidate versus Ketamine as prehospital induction agent in patients with suspectedsevere traumatic brain injury.
Severe traumatic brain injury is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among young people around the world. Prehospital care focuses on the prevention and treatment of secondary brain injury and commonly includes tracheal intubation after induction of general anesthesia. The choice of induction agent in this setting is controversial. This study therefore investigated the association between the chosen induction medication etomidate versus S(+)-ketamine and the 30-day mortality in patients with severe traumatic brain injury who received prehospital airway management in the Netherlands. ⋯ The analysis found no evidence for an association between the use of etomidate or S(+)-ketamine as an anesthetic agent for intubation in patients with traumatic brain injury and mortality after 30 days in the prehospital setting, suggesting that the choice of induction agent may not influence the patient mortality rate in this population.
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After neurosurgery, intracranial infection is a common complication with high rates of clinical impairment and death. Traditional diagnostic approaches are time-consuming. Early and correct diagnosis improves infection control, treatment success, and survival. Novel markers are used to diagnose and classify post-neurosurgical meningitis (PNM) to overcome the difficulties of diagnosing postoperative intracranial infections and avoid the drawbacks of existing diagnostic measures. The objective was to investigate the diagnostic value of β-2 transferrin (β-2TF) and transferrin (TF) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for the identification of intracranial infection after neurosurgery. ⋯ Postoperative cerebral infections can be identified using CSF β-2TF as a particular marker protein. CSF TF helps distinguish PNBM from PNAM. Combining CSF LA with them improves diagnostic speed, sensitivity, and accuracy. LA and β-2TF were independent risk factors for cerebral infection.
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The Center for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 75% of reported cases of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are mild, where chronic pain and depression are 2 of the most common symptoms. In this study, we used a murine model of repeated mild TBI to characterize the associated pain hypersensitivity and affective-like behavior and to what extent microglial reactivity contributes to these behavioral phenotypes. Male and female C57BL/6J mice underwent sham or repeated mild traumatic brain injury (rmTBI) and were tested for up to 9 weeks postinjury, where an anti-inflammatory/neuroprotective drug (minocycline) was introduced at 5 weeks postinjury in the drinking water. ⋯ Finally, we show that the antiepileptic drug, gabapentin, produced negative reinforcement in male rmTBI mice that was prevented by minocycline treatment, whereas rmTBI female mice showed a place aversion to gabapentin. Collectively, pain hypersensitivity, increased tonic-aversive pain components, and negative affective states were evident in both male and female rmTBI mice, but suppression of microglial reactivity was only sufficient to reverse behavioral changes in male mice. Neuroinflammation in limbic structures seems to be a contributing factor in behavioral changes resulting from rmTBI.