Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Measuring, treating brain hypoxia looks promising for TBI


 

AT ANA 2017

– It’s been possible for over 15 years for neurointensivists to measure the partial pressure of oxygen in the brain of patients following traumatic brain injury.

But the technology has not been widely adopted because there have been no high-quality data showing that it’s useful. As a result, in most hospitals, TBI treatment is guided mostly by intracranial pressure.

The evidence gap is being filled. In a recent phase 2 trial, there was a trend towards benefit when treatment was guided by both intracranial pressure and the brain oxygenation (Crit Care Med. 2017 Nov;45[11]:1907-14). The study was powered for nonfutility, not clinically meaningful change, but the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has recently funded a 45-site, phase 3 trial that will definitively answer whether treatment protocols informed by both pressure and oxygen improve neurologic outcomes, said principal investigator Ramon Diaz-Arrastia, MD, PhD, a professor of neurology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

In an interview at the annual meeting of the American Neurological Association, he explained the work, and exactly how paying attention to brain oxygen levels changed treatment in the phase 2 study. It didn’t take anything unusual to maintain oxygen partial pressure above 20 mm Hg.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

Antithrombotics appear safe in BCVI with concomitant injuries
MDedge Neurology
Doppler ultrasound headset performs well at spotting sports-related concussion
MDedge Neurology
Tips for Living With Spinal Cord Injury
MDedge Neurology
Cervical spine injury common in children under age 2 with abusive head trauma
MDedge Neurology
Removal from play reduces concussion recovery time in athletes
MDedge Neurology
FDA: New labeling warns against combining opioids, benzodiazepines
MDedge Neurology
TBI scoring system predicts outcomes with only initial head CT findings
MDedge Neurology
Hypotension ‘dose’ drives mortality in traumatic brain injury
MDedge Neurology
Aspirin use linked to increased ICH in trauma patients
MDedge Neurology
VIDEO: Sildenafil improves cerebrovascular reactivity in chronic TBI
MDedge Neurology

Related Articles