Timing of postoperative intracranial hematoma development and implications for the best use of neurosurgical intensive care

1995 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. S. Taylor ◽  
Nicholas W. M. Thomas ◽  
Julia A. Wellings ◽  
B. Anthony Bell

✓ This study records the incidence and timing of postoperative hematomas in neurosurgical patients and analyzes the best use of neurosurgical intensive care. In 2305 patients undergoing freehand or stereotactic biopsy, elective or emergency craniotomy, or posterior fossa surgery, 50 (2.2%) developed a hematoma. Clinical deterioration as a result of postoperative hematoma occurred within 6 hours of surgery in 44 patients and more than 24 hours after surgery in six patients. Although patients undergoing posterior fossa surgery or emergency craniotomy warrant longer periods of intensive-care observation, patients having elective supratentorial operations can safely be transferred to a neurosurgical ward for observation, provided they have regained their preoperative neurological status by 6 hours postsurgery.

1992 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lennart Persson ◽  
Lars Hillered

✓ The authors have used intracerebral microdialysis to develop a method for routine monitoring of disturbances in brain energy metabolism in patients in the neurosurgical intensive care unit. Microdialysis was conducted for periods ranging from 2.3 to 8.3 days in four patients (three with severe head injuries and one with severe subarachnoid hemorrhage). Altogether, 4447 chemical analyses from 587 dialysis samples were carried out. Concentrations of the energy-related metabolites lactate, pyruvate, and hypoxanthine were measured, and the lactate:pyruvate ratio was calculated. In addition, the amino acids glutamate, aspartate, taurine, glutamine, asparagine, and glycine were measured in one patient. The microdialysis data were matched with various clinical events, including intracranial hypertension and therapeutic interventions such as initiation or withdrawal of barbiturates and cerebrospinal fluid drainage. The present study shows that microdialysis can be used for long-term measurement of extracellular fluid (ECF) energy-related metabolites and amino acids in the frontal cortex of neurosurgical patients in a clinical setting. Fluctuations of the measured ECF energy-related substances corresponded to various clinical events presumably involving hypoxia/ischemia. The authors found a 25-fold increase in ECF glutamate, aspartate, and taurine under conditions of energy perturbation, as indicated by high levels of the lactate:pyruvate ratio, lactate, and hypoxanthine. The use of long-term intracerebral microdialysis in patients opens a new field of clinical research, with many possibilities for improving insight into intracranial dynamics in acute cerebral conditions.


Author(s):  
Choo Hwee Poi ◽  
Mervyn Yong Hwang Koh ◽  
Tessa Li-Yen Koh ◽  
Yu-Lin Wong ◽  
Wendy Yu Mei Ong ◽  
...  

Objectives: We conducted a pilot quality improvement (QI) project with the aim of improving accessibility of palliative care to critically ill neurosurgical patients. Methods: The QI project was conducted in the neurosurgical intensive care unit (NS-ICU). Prior to the QI project, referral rates to palliative care were low. The ICU-Palliative Care collaborative comprising of the palliative and intensive care team led the QI project from 2013 to 2015. The interventions included engaging key stake-holders, establishing formal screening and referral criteria, standardizing workflows and having combined meetings with interdisciplinary teams in ICU to discuss patients’ care plans. The Palliative care team would review patients for symptom optimization, attend joint family conferences with the ICU team and support patients and families post-ICU care. We also collected data in the post-QI period from 2016 to 2018 to review the sustainability of the interventions. Results: Interventions from our QI project and the ICU-Palliative Care collaborative resulted in a significant increase in the number of referrals from 9 in 2012 to 44 in 2014 and 47 the year later. The collaboration was beneficial in facilitating transfers out of ICU with more deaths outside ICU on comfort-directed care (96%) than patients not referred (75.7%, p < 0.05). Significantly more patients had a Do-Not-Resuscitation (DNR) order upon transfer out of ICU (89.7%) compared to patients not referred (74.2.%, p < 0.001), and had fewer investigations in the last 48 hours of life (p < 0.001). Per-day ICU cost was decreased for referred patients (p < 0.05). Conclusions: Multi-faceted QI interventions increased referral rates to palliative care. Referred patients had fewer investigations at the end-of-life and per-day ICU costs.


1998 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 155-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward J. Kosnik

✓ The technique of harvesting the ligamentum nuchae and its use in posterior fossa surgery are discussed. By using this technique the author has avoided postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leakage in more than 200 procedures.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 838-846 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyeong-Joong Yi ◽  
Young-Soo Kim ◽  
Yong Ko ◽  
Suck-Jun Oh ◽  
Kwang-Myung Kim ◽  
...  

Abstract OBJECTIVE: We investigated predictors of survival and the neurological outcomes of neurosurgical patients who experienced cardiac arrest and received cardiopulmonary resuscitation after being admitted to the neurosurgical intensive care unit. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted of adult patients in the neurosurgical intensive care unit who had experienced cardiac arrest and received cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Factors relevant to the cardiac arrest (before and after arrest) were used to study association with survival (immediate or short-term) and neurological outcome (unconscious or conscious) via statistical methods. RESULTS: Immediate survival was seen in 105 patients (49%), 19 survived until hospital discharge, and 11 were still alive at the conclusion of this study. Of the immediate survivors, 41 patients were conscious and 64 were unconscious. Multivariate analysis showed increased mortality in patients with infection, asystole, or resuscitation time exceeding 30 minutes (P &lt; 0.05). Additional factors associated with high in-hospital mortality included lack of spontaneous respiration, no caloric-vestibular reflex, and unconsciousness after resuscitation (P &lt; 0.05). In addition, neurological recovery was poor in patients with infection, asystole, no caloric-vestibular reflex, conscious recovery, or resuscitation lasting more than 30 minutes (P &lt; 0.05). CONCLUSION: Even after initially successful resuscitation, survival and neurological recovery is quite dismal in patients with cerebral lesions. Prognostic factors for neurosurgical patients should be assessed on an individual basis to determine medical futility in the early post-resuscitation period.


2007 ◽  
Vol 106 (5) ◽  
pp. 820-825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Hillman ◽  
Oscar Åneman ◽  
Mikael Persson ◽  
Chris Andersson ◽  
Charlotte Dabrosin ◽  
...  

Object The aim of this study was to make a preliminary evaluation of whether microdialysis monitoring of cytokines and other proteins in severely diseased neurosurgical patients has the potential of adding significant information to optimize care, thus broadening the understanding of the function of these molecules in brain injury. Methods Paired intracerebral microdialysis catheters with high-cutoff membranes were inserted in 14 comatose patients who had been treated in a neurosurgical intensive care unit following subarachnoidal hemorrhage or traumatic brain injury. Samples were collected every 6 hours (for up to 7 days) and were analyzed at bedside for routine metabolites and later in the laboratory for interleukin (IL)–1 and IL-6; in two patients, vascular endothelial growth factor and cathepsin-D were also checked. Aggregated microprobe data gave rough estimations of profound focal cytokine responses related to morphological tissue injury and to anaerobic metabolism that were not evident from the concomitantly collected cerebrospinal fluid data. Data regarding tissue with no macroscopic evidence of injury demonstrated that IL release not only is elicited in severely compromised tissue but also may be a general phenomenon in brains subjected to stress. Macroscopic tissue injury was strongly linked to IL-6 but not IL-1b activation. Furthermore, IL release seems to be stimulated by local ischemia. The basal tissue concentration level of IL-1b was estimated in the range of 10 to 150 pg/ml; for IL-6, the corresponding figure was 1000 to 20,000 pg/ml. Conclusions Data in the present study indicate that catheters with high-cutoff membranes have the potential of expanding microdialysis to the study of protein chemistry as a routine bedside method in neurointensive care.


2002 ◽  
Vol 96 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng-Shyuan Rau ◽  
Cheng-Loong Liang ◽  
Chun-Chung Lui ◽  
Tao-Chen Lee ◽  
Kang Lu

✓ Quadriplegia is a well-known complication of posterior fossa surgery performed while the patient is in the sitting position but is rarely associated with the prone position. A case of an 18-year-old man with a cerebellar medulloblastoma is described. There was no evidence of previous cervical disease. The patient suffered quadriplegia after undergoing surgery in the prone position. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a long hyperintense C2—T1 lesion on T2-weighted sequences. The authors speculate that, during the prolonged period in which the neck was in hyperflexion, overstretching of the cervical spinal cord and compromise of its blood supply might have caused this devastating complication.


1989 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 503-505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Rosenwasser ◽  
Laurence I. Kleiner ◽  
Joseph P. Krzeminski ◽  
William A. Buchheit

✓ Direct therapeutic drainage and intracranial pressure monitoring from the posterior fossa has never been accepted in neurosurgical practice. Potential complications including cerebrospinal fluid leak, cranial nerve palsies, and brain-stem irritation have been a major deterrent. The authors placed a catheter for pressure monitoring in the posterior fossa of 20 patients in the course of posterior fossa surgery: 14 patients with acoustic schwannomas, four with posterior fossa meningiomas, one with cerebellar hemangioblastoma, and one with a solitary cerebellar metastatic lesion. A Richmond bolt was also placed in the frontal area. Continuous monitoring of the supratentorial and infratentorial compartments was performed for 48 hours. During the first 12 hours the posterior fossa pressure was 50% greater than that of the supratentorial space in all patients (p < 0.01). Over the next 12 hours the supratentorial pressure was 10% to 15% higher than the posterior fossa pressures in all patients, and by 48 hours of monitoring the pressures had equilibrated. There was no mortality or morbidity referable to insertion of the posterior fossa catheter. The conclusions drawn from this study are that: 1) direct monitoring and drainage of the posterior fossa is safe and effective; and 2) within the early postoperative period, the supratentorial pressures failed to reflect what is taking place within the posterior fossa. The implications and advantages of direct posterior fossa monitoring in the postoperative patient are discussed.


2001 ◽  
Vol 95 (5) ◽  
pp. 791-797 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Sainte-Rose ◽  
Giuseppe Cinalli ◽  
Franck E. Roux ◽  
Wirginia Maixner ◽  
Paul D. Chumas ◽  
...  

Object. The authors undertook a study to evaluate the effectiveness of endoscopic third ventriculostomy in the management of hydrocephalus before and after surgical intervention for posterior fossa tumors in children. Methods. Between October 1, 1993, and December 31, 1997, a total of 206 consecutive children with posterior fossa tumors underwent surgery at Hôpital Necker—Enfants Malades in Paris. Excluded were 10 patients in whom shunts had been placed at the referring hospital. The medical records and neuroimaging studies of the remaining 196 patients were reviewed and categorized into three groups: Group A, 67 patients with hydrocephalus present on admission in whom endoscopic third ventriculostomy was performed prior to tumor removal; Group B, 82 patients with hydrocephalus who did not undergo preliminary third ventriculostomy but instead received conventional treatment; and Group C, 47 patients in whom no ventricular dilation was present on admission. There were no significant differences between patients in Group A or B with respect to the following variables: age at presentation, evidence of metastatic disease, extent of tumor resection, or follow-up duration. In patients in Group A, however, more severe hydrocephalus was demonstrated (p < 0.01); the patients in Group C were in this respect different from those in the other two groups. Ultimately, there were only four patients (6%) in Group A compared with 22 patients (26.8%) in Group B (p = 0.001) in whom progressive hydrocephalus required treatment following removal of the posterior fossa tumor. Sixteen patients (20%) in Group B underwent insertion of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, which is similar to the incidence reported in the literature and significantly different from that demonstrated in Group A (p < 0.016). The other six patients (7.3%) were treated by endoscopic third ventriculostomy after tumor resection. In Group C, two patients (4.3%) with postoperative hydrocephalus underwent endoscopic third ventriculostomy. In three patients who required placement of CSF shunts several episodes of shunt malfunction occurred that were ultimately managed by endoscopic third ventriculostomy and definitive removal of the shunt. There were no deaths; however, there were four cases of transient morbidity associated with third ventriculostomy. Conclusions. Third ventriculostomy is feasible even in the presence of posterior fossa tumors (including brainstem tumors). When performed prior to posterior fossa surgery, it significantly reduces the incidence of postoperative hydrocephalus. The procedure provides a valid alternative to placement of a permanent shunt in cases in which hydrocephalus develops following posterior fossa surgery, and it may negate the need for the shunt in cases in which the shunt malfunctions. Furthermore, in patients in whom CSF has caused spread of the tumor at presentation, third ventriculostomy allows chemotherapy to be undertaken prior to tumor excision by controlling hydrocephalus. Although the authors acknowledge that the routine application of third ventriculostomy in selected patients results in a proportion of patients undergoing an “unnecessary” procedure, they believe that because patients' postoperative courses are less complicated and because the incidence of morbidity is low and the success rate is high in those patients with severe hydrocephalus that further investigation of this protocol is warranted.


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