Perfusion tomography in early follow-up of acute traumatic subdural hematoma: a case series.
Robson Luis Oliveira de AmorimVinicius Trindade da SilvaHenrique Oliveira MartinsSergio BrasilDaniel Agustín GodoyMatheus Teixeira MendesGabriel GattasEdson Bor-Seng-ShuWellingson Silva PaivaPublished in: Journal of clinical monitoring and computing (2024)
Perfusion Computed Tomography (PCT) is an alternative tool to assess cerebral hemodynamics during trauma. As acute traumatic subdural hematomas (ASH) is a severe primary injury associated with poor outcomes, the aim of this study was to evaluate the cerebral hemodynamics in this context. Five adult patients with moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and ASH were included. All individuals were indicated for surgical evacuation. Before and after surgery, PCT was performed and cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral blood volume (CBV) and mean transit time (MTT) were evaluated. These parameters were associated with the outcome at 6 months post-trauma with the extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOSE). Mean age of population was 46 years (SD: 8.1). Mean post-resuscitation Glasgow coma scale (GCS) was 10 (SD: 3.4). Mean preoperative midline brain shift was 10.1 mm (SD: 1.8). Preoperative CBF and MTT were 23.9 ml/100 g/min (SD: 6.1) and 7.3 s (1.3) respectively. After surgery, CBF increase to 30.7 ml/100 g/min (SD: 5.1), and MTT decrease to 5.8s (SD:1.0), however, both changes don't achieve statistically significance (p = 0.06). Additionally, CBV increase after surgery, from 2.34 (SD: 0.67) to 2.63 ml/100 g (SD: 1.10), (p = 0.31). Spearman correlation test of postoperative and preoperative CBF ratio with outcome at 6 months was 0.94 (p = 0.054). One patient died with the highest preoperative MTT (9.97 s) and CBV (4.51 ml/100 g). CBF seems to increase after surgery, especially when evaluated together with the MTT values. It is suggested that the improvement in postoperative brain hemodynamics correlates to favorable outcome.
Keyphrases
- patients undergoing
- cerebral blood flow
- severe traumatic brain injury
- computed tomography
- spinal cord injury
- liver failure
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- traumatic brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- cardiac arrest
- white matter
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- drug induced
- resting state
- risk assessment
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- positron emission tomography
- hepatitis b virus
- functional connectivity
- magnetic resonance
- municipal solid waste
- heavy metals
- septic shock