EARLY AND LATE SYSTEMIC HYPOTENSION AS A FREQUENT AND FUNDAMENTAL SOURCE OF CEREBRAL-ISCHEMIA FOLLOWING SEVERE BRAIN INJURY IN THE TRAUMATIC COMA DATA-BANK

Citation
Rm. Chesnut et al., EARLY AND LATE SYSTEMIC HYPOTENSION AS A FREQUENT AND FUNDAMENTAL SOURCE OF CEREBRAL-ISCHEMIA FOLLOWING SEVERE BRAIN INJURY IN THE TRAUMATIC COMA DATA-BANK, Acta neurochirurgica, 1993, pp. 121-125
Citations number
9
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery,Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00016268
Year of publication
1993
Supplement
59
Pages
121 - 125
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-6268(1993):<121:EALSHA>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
The outcome from severe head injury (GCS less-than-or-equal-to 8 mmHg) was prospectively studied in patients from the Traumatic Coma Data Ba nk. We investigated the impact on outcome of hypotension (SBP < 90 mmH g) occurring from injury through resuscitation (early hypotension; N = 717) or in the Intensive Care Unit [ICU] (late hypotension; N = 493). Early hypotension occurred in 248 patients (34.6%) and was associated with a doubling of mortality (55% vs. 27%). If shock was present on a dmission, the mortality was 65%. These effects were independent of age , admission GCS motor score, presence of hypoxia, or associated severe extracranial trauma, suggesting that the influence of multiple system trauma in head injured patients is primarily due to associated hypote nsion. Late hypotension occurred in 156 of 493 patients (32%) and was the only hypotensive episode in 117 (24%). For 117 patients whose only hypotensive episode occurred in the ICU, 66% either died or were vege tative survivors, compared to 17% of patients who never suffered an hy potensive episode. Logistic regression modelling suggested that early and late shock were the most powerful independent predictors of mortal ity in this group of patients. These data demonstrate that hypotension is a common and devastating secondary brain insult in severe head inj ury patients, occurring not only during transport and resuscitation bu t also ''right under our noses'' in the ICU. We suggest that vigorous attention to eliminate or minimize such insults has the potential of m arkedly improving outcome from severe head injury.