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Critical Care Medicine:
December 2007 - Volume 35 - Issue 12 - pp 2830-2836
doi: 10.1097/01.CCM.0000295667.66853.BC
Neurologic Critical Care

Nonconvulsive electrographic seizures after traumatic brain injury result in a delayed, prolonged increase in intracranial pressure and metabolic crisis

Vespa, Paul M. MD, FCCM; Miller, Chad MD; McArthur, David PhD; Eliseo, Mathew BS; Etchepare, Maria BSN, RN; Hirt, Daniel BS; Glenn, Thomas C. PhD; Martin, Neil MD; Hovda, David PhD

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Abstract

Objective: To determine whether nonconvulsive electrographic post-traumatic seizures result in increases in intracranial pressure and microdialysis lactate/pyruvate ratio.

Design: Prospective monitoring with retrospective data analysis.

Setting: Single center academic neurologic intensive care unit.

Patients: Twenty moderate to severe traumatic brain injury patients (Glasgow Coma Score 3–13).

Measurements and Main Results: Continuous electroencephalography and cerebral microdialysis were performed for 7 days after injury. Ten patients had seizures and were compared with a matched cohort of traumatic brain injury patients without seizures. The seizures were repetitive and constituted status epilepticus in seven of ten patients. Using a within-subject design, post-traumatic seizures resulted in episodic increases in intracranial pressure (22.4 ± 7 vs. 12.8 ± 4.3 mm Hg; p < .001) and an episodic increase in lactate/pyruvate ratio (49.4 ± 16 vs. 23.8 ± 7.6; p < .001) in the seizure group. Using a between-subjects comparison, the seizure group demonstrated a higher mean intracranial pressure (17.6 ± 6.5 vs. 12.2 ± 4.2 mm Hg; p < .001), a higher mean lactate/pyruvate ratio (38.6 ± 18 vs. 27 ± 9; p < .001) compared with nonseizure patients. The intracranial pressure and lactate/pyruvate ratio remained elevated beyond postinjury hour 100 in the seizure group but not the nonseizure group (p < .02).

Conclusion: Post-traumatic seizures result in episodic as well as long-lasting increases in intracranial pressure and microdialysis lactate/pyruvate ratio. These data suggest that post-traumatic seizures represent a therapeutic target for patients with traumatic brain injury.

© 2007 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

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