Artículos de revistas
Cerebral hemometabolism: variability the acute phase of traumatic coma
Registro en:
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria. Assoc Arquivos De Neuro- Psiquiatria, v. 58, n. 3B, n. 877, n. 882, 2000.
0004-282X
WOS:000089791300013
10.1590/S0004-282X2000000500013
Autor
Falcao, ALE
Araujo, S
Dragosavac, D
Terzi, RGG
Thiesen, RAS
Cintra, EA
Sardinha, LAC
Neto, AC
Dantas, VP
Quagliato, EMAB
Institución
Resumen
Objective: to evaluate the interrelationships between cerebral and systemic hemometabolic alterations in patients with severe traumatic brain injury managed according to a standardized therapeutic protocol. Design: prospective, interventional study in patients with traumatic coma. Setting: a general Intensive Care Unit in a teaching hospital. Patients and methods: twenty-seven patients (21M e 6F), aging 14-58 years, with severe acute brain trauma, presenting with three to eight points on the Glasgow Coma Scale, were prospectively evaluated according to a cumulative protocol for the management of acute intracranial hypertension, where intracranial pressure (ICP) and cerebral extraction of oxygen (CEO3) were routinely measured. Hemometabolic interrelationships involving mean arterial pressure (MAP), ICP, arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2), CEO2, cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) and systemic extraction of oxygen (SEO2) were analyzed. Interventions: routine therapeutic procedures. Results. no correlation was found between CEO2 and CPP (r = -0.07; p = 0.41). There was a significant negative correlation between PaCO2 and CEO2 (r = -0.24; p = 0.005) and a positive correlation between SEO2 and CEO2 (r = 0.24; p = 0 01). The mortality rate in this group of patients was 25.9% (7/27). Conclusion: 1) CPP and CEO2 are unrelated; 2) CEO2 and PaCO2 ore closely related; 3) during optimized hyperventilation, CEO2 and SEO2 are coupled. 58 3B 877 882