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Current Opinion in Critical Care:
April 2008 - Volume 14 - Issue 2 - p 129-134
doi: 10.1097/MCC.0b013e3282f63c51
Neuroscience: Edited by Claudia S. Robertson

Treatment of intracranial hypertension

Lescot, Thomas; Abdennour, Lamine; Boch, Anne-Laure; Puybasset, Louis

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Abstract

Purpose of review: The review provides key points and recent advances regarding the treatments of intracranial hypertension as a consequence of traumatic brain injury. The review is based on the pathophysiology of brain edema and draws on the current literature as well as clinical bedside experience.

Recent findings: The review will cite baseline literature and discuss emerging data on cerebral perfusion pressure, sedation, hypothermia, osmotherapy and albumin as treatments of intracranial hypertension in traumatic brain-injured patients.

Summary: One of the key issues is to consider that traumatic brain injury is more likely a syndrome than a disease. In particular, the presence or absence of a high contusional volume could influence the treatments to be implemented. The use of osmotherapy and/or high cerebral perfusion pressure should be restricted to patients without major contusions. Some physiopathological, experimental and clinical data, however, show that corticosteroids and albumin - therapies that have been proven deleterious if administered systematically - are worth reconsidering for this subgroup of patients. The current Pitié-Salpêtrière algorithm, where treatments are stratified according to their potential side effects, will be added at the end of the review as an example of an integrated strategy.

© 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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