Hemostasis and intracranial surgery

1983 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 693-698 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Jaap van der Sande ◽  
Jan J. Veltkamp ◽  
Marijke L. Bouwhuis-Hoogerwerf

✓ Preoperative and postoperative coagulation studies were performed in 25 patients undergoing various intracranial surgical procedures. Coagulation abnormalities, mostly consisting of an increase of fibrin/fibrinogen degradation product concentration, either appeared or increased postoperatively in 18 patients. This incidence of postoperative appearance or increase of coagulation abnormalities is higher than that reported in a comparable study of patients after general surgical procedures, and also higher than that of coagulation abnormalities in a previous study of patients after blunt head injury. Although the coagulation abnormalities after intracranial surgery were usually small, they tended to be larger in patients with more extensive intracranial procedures.

1988 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 356-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazunari Oka ◽  
Hiroko Tsuda ◽  
Kazufumi Kamikaseda ◽  
Ryuji Nakamura ◽  
Masashi Fukui ◽  
...  

✓ The physical act of operating on 13 patients with meningiomas was studied for its effect on the fibrinolytic system. Fibrinolytic abnormalities, mainly due to an increase of plasma fibrinolytic activity, appeared in three patients prior to, during, or after surgery. These patients demonstrated hemorrhagic diathesis in the operative wounds which was associated with a consumptive coagulopathy, namely, an increase of fibrin/fibrinogen degradation product concentration and a decrease of fibrinogen concentration in plasma. Antiplasmin agents (gabexate and tranexamic acid) were effective in minimizing loss of blood during and after the operation. Abnormal hyperfibrinolysis seems to play a role in hemostatic difficulties in patients undergoing surgery for meningioma.


1981 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 718-724 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Jaap van der Sande ◽  
Jan J. Veltkamp ◽  
Ria J. Boekhout-Mussert ◽  
G. Jan Vielvoye

✓ Coagulation studies (plasma fibrinogen, ethanol gelation test, and fibrin-fibrinogen degradation product concentration) and computerized tomography (CT) scan examinations were performed in 55 patients with blunt head injury. The frequency of abnormalities in both coagulation study results and CT scans was higher in patients with severe clinical features and clinical course than in less severely injured patients; in these same patients the coagulation results were abnormal (64%) more frequently than the CT scans (40%). Very high fibrin-fibrinogen degradation product (FDP) concentrations were found to be associated with combined hemorrhagic lesions and mass effect on CT scans, but not with a specific localization of braintissue damage. It was concluded that: 1) FDP concentration reflects the amount of brain-tissue damage rather than its location, and 2) in the absence of other possible causes of disseminated intravascular coagulation, coagulation studies may be more sensitive than CT scanning in demonstrating brain contusion.


1978 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 357-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Jaap van der Sande ◽  
Jan J. Veltkamp ◽  
Ria J. Boekhout-Mussert ◽  
Marijke L. Bouwhuis-Hoogerwerf

✓ Coagulation studies (plasma fibrinogen, ethanol gelation test, and fibrin/fibrinogen degradation product concentration) were done in 150 patients who were admitted after blunt head injury. Results were abnormal in 60 patients and were found to be correlated with the level of consciousness and with the presence of neurological signs. Many of these patients had fractures, but findings in a control group of 26 patients with major fractures without head injury indicate that fractures were not of paramount importance in causing clotting changes. Conclusive evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation was found in 12 patients. Cases with a fatal clinical course were mostly associated with very high fibrin/fibrinogen degradation product concentrations. Some case histories are reported, confirming the hypothesized correlation between coagulation results and brain tissue destruction rather than brain compression. It was concluded that some degree of disseminated intravascular coagulation in patients with blunt head injury occurs more often than expected and that coagulation studies might have both diagnostic and prognostic value.


1993 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 354-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald W. Marion ◽  
Walter D. Obrist ◽  
Patricia M. Earlier ◽  
Louis E. Penrod ◽  
Joseph M. Darby

✓ Animal research suggests that moderate therapeutic hypothermia may improve outcome after a severe head injury, but its efficacy has not been established in humans. The authors randomly assigned 40 consecutively treated patients with a severe closed head injury (Glasgow Coma Scale score 3 to 7) to either a hypothermia or a normothermia group. Using cooling blankets and cold saline gastric lavage, patients in the hypothermia group were cooled to 32° to 33°C (brain temperature) within a mean of 10 hours after injury, maintained at that temperature for 24 hours, and rewarmed to 37° to 38°C over 12 hours. Patients in the normothermia group were maintained at 37° to 38°C during this time. Deep-brain temperatures were monitored directly and used for all temperature determinations. Intracranial pressure (ICP), cerebral blood flow (CBF), and cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen (CMRO2) were measured serially for all patients. Hypothermia significantly reduced ICP (40%) and CBF (26%) during the cooling period, and neither parameter showed a significant rebound increase after patients were rewarmed. Compared to the normothermia group, the mean CMRO2 in the hypothermia group was lower during cooling and higher 5 days after injury. Three months after injury, 12 of the 20 patients in the hypothermia group had moderate, mild, or no disabilities; eight of the 20 patients in the normothermia group had improved to the same degree. Both groups had a similar incidence of systemic complications, including cardiac arrhythmias, coagulopathies, and pulmonary complications. It is concluded that therapeutic moderate hypothermia is safe and has sustained favorable effects on acute derangements of cerebral physiology and metabolism caused by severe closed head injury. The trend toward better outcome with hypothermia may indicate that its beneficial physiological and metabolic effects limit secondary brain injury.


1971 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 416-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin E. MacGee

✓ Results in 27 cases of intracranial surgery for metastatic lung cancer are evaluated with regard to both the quality and duration of survival; 56% of the patients lived more than 1 year, with the longest survivor still living 32 months after operation. The operative mortality was 26%. These data suggest that intracranial surgery is worthwhile in patients with lung cancer when the cerebral metastasis is either solitary or single.


1983 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. David Mendelow ◽  
John O. Rowan ◽  
Lilian Murray ◽  
Audrey E. Kerr

✓ Simultaneous recordings of intracranial pressure (ICP) from a single-lumen subdural screw and a ventricular catheter were compared in 10 patients with severe head injury. Forty-one percent of the readings corresponded within the same 10 mm Hg ranges, while 13% of the screw pressure measurements were higher and 46% were lower than the associated ventricular catheter measurements. In 10 other patients, also with severe head injury, pressure measurements obtained with the Leeds-type screw were similarly compared with ventricular fluid pressure. Fifty-eight percent of the dual pressure readings corresponded, while 15% of the screw measurements were higher and 27% were lower than the ventricular fluid pressure, within 10-mm Hg ranges. It is concluded that subdural screws may give unreliable results, particularly by underestimating the occurrence of high ICP.


1977 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 256-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur I. Kobrine ◽  
Eugene Timmins ◽  
Rodwan K. Rajjoub ◽  
Hugo V. Rizzoli ◽  
David O. Davis

✓ The authors documented by computerized axial tomography a case of massive brain swelling occurring within 20 minutes of a closed head injury. It is suggested that the cause of the brain swelling is acute vascular dilatation.


1979 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 507-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard N. W. Wohns ◽  
Allen R. Wyler

✓ We are reporting a retrospective study of 62 patients whose head injury was sufficiently severe to cause a high probability of posttraumatic epilepsy. Of 50 patients treated with phenytoin, 10% developed epilepsy of late onset. Twelve patients not treated with phenytoin but who had head injuries of equal magnitude had a 50% incidence of epilepsy. These data from a highly selected group of patients with severe head injuries confirm the bias that treatment with phenytoin decreases the incidence of posttraumatic epilepsy.


1983 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 672-677 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Brian North ◽  
Robert K. Penhall ◽  
Ahmad Hanieh ◽  
Derek B. Frewin ◽  
William B. Taylor

✓ A double-blind trial of phenytoin therapy following craniotomy was performed to test the hypothesis that phenytoin is effective in reducing postoperative epilepsy. A significant reduction in the frequency of epilepsy was observed in the group receiving the active drug up to the 10th postoperative week. Half of the seizures occurred in the first 2 weeks and two-thirds within 1 month of cranial surgery. High rates of epilepsy were observed after surgery in patients with meningioma, metastasis, aneurysm, and head injury. Routine prophylaxis with phenytoin (in a dosage of 5 to 6 mg/kg/day) would seem to be indicated, particularly in high-risk patients and, where possible, this treatment should be started 1 week preoperatively. Seizure control is best when therapeutic levels of phenytoin are maintained.


1991 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 766-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith B. Quattrocchi ◽  
Edmund H. Frank ◽  
Claramae H. Miller ◽  
Asim Amin ◽  
Bernardo W. Issel ◽  
...  

✓ Infection is a major complication of severe head injury, occurring in 50% to 75% of patients who survive to hospitalization. Previous investigations of immune activity following head injury have demonstrated suppression of helper T-cell activation. In this study, the in vitro production of interferon-gamma (INF-γ), interleukin-1 (IL-1), and interleukin-2 (IL-2) was determined in 25 head-injured patients following incubation of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL's) with the lymphocyte mitogen phytohemagglutinin (PHA). In order to elucidate the functional status of cellular cytotoxicity, lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell cytotoxicity assays were performed both prior to and following incubation of PBL's with IL-2 in five patients with severe head injury. The production of INF-γ and IL-2 by PHA-stimulated PBL's was maximally depressed within 24 hours of injury (p < 0.001 for INF-γ, p = 0.035 for IL-2) and partially normalized within 21 days of injury. There was no change in the production of IL-1. When comparing the in vitro LAK cell cytotoxicity of PBL's from head-injured patients and normal subjects, there was a significant depression in LAK cell cytotoxicity both prior to (p = 0.010) and following (p < 0.001) incubation of PBL's with IL-2. The results of this study indicate that IL-2 and INF-γ production, normally required for inducing cell-mediated immunity, is suppressed following severe head injury. The failure of IL-2 to enhance LAK cell cytotoxicity suggests that factors other than decreased IL-2 production, such as inhibitory soluble mediators or suppressor lymphocytes, may be responsible for the reduction in cellular immune activity following severe head injury. These findings may have significant implications in designing clinical studies aimed at reducing the incidence of infection following severe head injury.


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