Title: Management Guidelines for Head Trauma
1Management Guidelines for Head Trauma
David Bliss Chris Dael Tim Deakers Michael
Levy Karl Maher Todd Maugans Gordon McComb
Karen McVeigh Alan Nager Christopher
Newth Carol Nicholson Niurka Rivero Randall
Wetzel
Childrens Hospital of Los Angeles 11.18.97
2Comments R. Chestnut I
- As a result of tumultuous growth and somewhat
erratic emergence of neurotraumatology, there is
little consensus at this time regarding
pathophysiologic mechanisms and methods of
management. - Randall Chestnut. CCM 251275,1997.
3Comments R. Chestnut II
- It is generally accepted that an organised
concatenation of individually unproven but
collectively apparently successful therapies is
associated with improved outcome from traumatic
brain injury. - Randall Chestnut. CCM 251275,1997.
4Comments R. Chestnut III
- However, there appears to be significant
controversy regarding most of the component
treatment concepts when approached individually. - Randall Chestnut. CCM 251275,1997.
5Airway management GCS
Patients with Glasgow coma scores of 8 or below
require oral endotracheal intubation.
6Airway management rapid sequence intubation
Sellick maneuver
- succinylcholine its rapid onset and rapid
reversibility make it desirable in the trauma
patient - succinylcholine can lead to increased ICP,
cerebral blood flow and CO2 production - these potential adverse effects can be minimized,
making our first choice for neuromuscular
blockade in the acute trauma setting
succinylcholine (1-2 mg/kg IV)
7Airway management succinylcholine
- can elevate I.C.P. independent of laryngoscopy
and intubation - related to increased muscle spindle activity
- partially blocked by precurarisation
- succinylcholine can be given to severely head
injuried patients in the ICU without detrimental
effects
8Airway management adjuncts I
2-5 minutes before the succinylcholine
atropine (0.01mg/kg) lidocaine (1.5-2.0
mg/kg) defasciculation pancuronium (0.03
mg/kg) vecuronium (0.03 mg/kg)
9Airway management adjuncts II
sedation midazolam (0.05 - 2.0 mg/kg) sodium
thiopentone (1 -4 mg/kg IV bolus) only if
hemodynamics are stable analgesia fentanyl
(1-5 mcg/kg)
10Airway management non-depolarizing agents
- In controlled circumstances, where large doses of
non-polarizing neuromuscular blocking agents can
be safely administered and sufficient personnel
are available, an alternative (non-depolarizing)
neuromuscular blocking agent might be used - rocuronium 1-1.5 mg/kg IV
- vecuronium 0.2-0.4 mg/kg IV
11Ventilation I
- regional blood flow is decreased by
hyperventilation in head injured children - hyperaemia is less common than once thought
- CMRO2 is decreased more than perfusion
- outcomes are worse in the mild to moderate injury
group. -
- J Neurosurg 75731-739, 1991.
- Crit Care Med 251402-1409, 1997.
12Ventilation II
There is no indication for prophylactic
hyperventilation.
Normocapnoea is good for you !
13Ventilation III
The recommended standard of care at CHLA is to
monitor end tidal pCO2 following oral
endotracheal intubation, during transport, during
neuroradiologic procedures and in the intensive
care unit. Normocapnoea is the goal
143 y/o boy after MVA. Spontaneouly breathing but
nasal flaring present. Atlantoaxial distraction
with severed spinal cord
atlas
odontoid
15Intravascular volume I
The targeted ideal for volume resuscitation in
head trauma is euvolemia. This should be
maintained with either normal saline or Lactated
Ringer's.
16Intravascular volume II
- Intravascular volume should be maintained with
solutions containing gt133meq\L Na (isotonic). - Hypertonic (3) saline may be indicated
(euvolaemic hypernatraemia).
17Intravascular volume III
- Hyperglycaemia and Hypoglycaemia must be avoided.
- Glucose (D5) not indicated for children over 6
months of age. - monitor serum glucose.
18Sedation and pain management I
Children who are agitated or possibly in pain,
require sedation and/or analgesia.
19Sedation and pain management II
- Midazolam and fentanyl are adequate, short acting
drugs to be used in this setting. No other drugs
are necessary routinely for sedation and
analgesia in the first 12 hours. - fentanyl 1-3 mcg/kg/min q 1 hr prn
- midazolam 0.05 to 0.1 mg/kg over 2 minutes
- Propofol has been considered however, it has a
propensity for hypotension in the acute setting.
20Positioning I
- In-line traction for intubation
- (all head injury is neck injury)
- Do Not occlude venous drainage
- watch the neck collars
- avoid Trendelenberg (central lines)
21Positioning II
22ICP monitoring I
Indicated for children with head trauma with a
Glasgow coma score of 7 or less or who are
rapidly deteriorating.
23ICP monitoring II
- In children who require neuromuscular blockade or
deep sedation or anesthesia, intracranial
pressure monitoring may be indicated at a higher
GCS. - Anaesthesia makes clinical monitoring of elevated
intracranial pressure extremely difficult and
thus, in selected cases ICP should be directly
measured if surgery is necessary.
24Cerebral perfusion pressure I
- maintain Cerebral Perfusion Pressure
(CPPMAP-ICP) - gt60 torr if ICP lt22 torr
- gt70torr if ICP gt 22 torr
- hypertonic resuscitation
- pressors
25Cerebral perfusion pressure II
http//neurosun.medsch.ucla.edu/BMML/nenov.44.VRM9
6/96MedVirReal.html
26ICP waveforms
- The normal ICP waveform contains three phases
- P1 (percussion wave) from arterial pulsations
- P2 (rebound wave) reflects intracranial
compliance - P3 (dichrotic wave) represents venous pulsations
27Intracranial compliance
28ICP b-waves I
- B - waves are frequent elevations (up to 50 mm
Hg) lasting several seconds, occuring in two
minute cycles. - b - waves are suggestive of poor intracranial
compliance
29ICP b-waves II
30ICP a-waves I
- A-waves (plateau waves) last 5-20 minutes, and
often accompany symptoms of brainstem
dysfunction. - cerebral perfusion pressure may be decreased
- a-waves often herald decompensation
31ICP a-waves II
32ICP a-waves mechanism I
- A-waves (plateau waves) result when mean systemic
blood pressure decreases below threshold. - cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) falls below
ischemic threshold - cerebrovasodilation occurs in response
- in a non-compliant cranium, this vasodilation
results in greatly increased intracranial pressure
33ICP a-waves mechanism II
34ICP terminal waves
35Pentobarbital coma I
- Pentobarbital-induced coma should be considered
if intracranial pressure is not controlled by - osmotherapy
- temperature regulation
- sedation
36Pentobarbital coma II
- ICP should be monitored when pentobarbital coma
is induced. Neurometric monitoring can be
facilitated by -
- continuous cerebral function monitoring
(Neurotrack) - continuous EEG
37Inhalational anaesthesia I
- Ideally, with inhalational anaesthesia, one would
like to see - decreased CMRO2
- CMRO2 and CBF remain linked
- no alteration in CSF dynamics
- no alteration in ICP
38Inhalational anaesthesia II
- Nitrous oxide increases CBF, CBV ICP not CO2
responsive worse than halothane or isofluorane - Halothane increases CBF and ICP decreases CSF
production - Desflurane decreased CMRO2, increased CBF,
increased ICP, decreased cerebral compliance
39Inhalational anaesthesia III
- Isoflurane decreases (or has no effect on) CBF
(coupled). Minimal effect on CSF volume or ICP - Sevoflurane decreases CMRO2, coupled, decreased
CBF, low B-G solubility coefficient
40Temperature regulation I
- Temperatures should, at all times, be maintained
below 37.5.0 C (higher temperatures are
associated with elevated ICP, increased CMRO2) - acetominophen, 15-20 mg/kg q 4-6 hours prn
- body exposure
-
- direct cooling
41Temperature regulation II
- mild hypothermia for patients with measured
elevated intracranial pressure (gt20 torr, 25 cm
H2O) will be instituted. - the goal is to maintain body temperatures
between 33-35o C (less is not better). -
- NEJM 336540,1997
42Summary - Trends
- No prophylactic hyperventilation
- Use of controlled hypothermia
- Euvolemic resuscitation
- Hypertonic fluids (3 saline)
- No steroids
- Propofol and Sevoflurane
43A joint production
(All net animation)
44A joint production
text randall wetzel md, children's hospital of
los angeles joseph dicarlo md, stanford
university graphics dogbyte productions dana
braner md, oregon health sciences university all
net joseph dicarlo md, stanford
university webpath, university of utah ucla dept
of neurosurgery