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Traumatic Brain Injury Children. Torsten Lauritsen Rigshospitalet Copenhagen. Aim. To give an overview of severe traumatic brain injury in children focus on resuscitation first line treatment guidelines To improve the care of children with severe traumatic brain injury.
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Traumatic Brain Injury Children Torsten Lauritsen Rigshospitalet Copenhagen
Aim • To give an overview of severetraumaticbraininjury in children • focus on resuscitation • first line treatment • guidelines • To improve the care of children with severetraumaticbraininjury Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
TBI • Epiduralhemorrhage • Subduralhemorrhage • Subarachnoidhemorrhage • Contusions • Cerebral edema • Ischemicinjury • Diffuse AxonalInjury • Abusive Head Trauma – Shaken Baby Syndrome Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Head trauma - physiology Primarybraindamage • Direct following the trauma • Irreversibel– Diffuse AxonalInjury • Treatmentdoes not improveprognosis Secundarybraininjury • Proper resuscitationwillimproveprognosis and preventfurtherdamage • Hypoxemia • Convulsions • Hypotension • Hyperthermia • Raised ICP • Hypoglycemia Decreased cerebral perfussion Cerebral oxygen delivery Increased oxygen consumption Increasedischemia
Neuroprotective agents pH Electrolytes Glucose ROS Sedation Temperature ICP Cerebral perfusion Chalkias A in J of Neurological Sciences 2012
Cerebral edema • Intracellular – hypoxia • Cellular metabolism • Cellular retention of sodium and water • Apoptosis • Vasogenic • Rupture of BBB leads to leakage from capillaries Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Paediatric trauma care Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hypotension is bad 131/299 = 44% had hypoxia Absense of BP monitoring => OR of death 4.5 118/299 = 39% had hypotension Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hypotension is bad Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Guidelines • Guidelines for the acute medical management of severe traumatic brain injury in infants, children, and adolescents Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Treatment • Resuscitation A B C D Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Treatment - Airway • Earlyintubation • Modified Rapid SequenzeInduction Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Rapid SequenceInduction • Premedication with spontaneous ventilation • Preoxygenation • Induction • Propofol/Tiopental (Ketamin/Etomidat) • Rocuronium • Fentanyl (Rapifen) • Mask ventilation (10-12 cm H2O) • Intubation
Treatment - Breathing • Oxygen • Maintainoxygenationwithin normal range • PEEP mightincrease ICP Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hypoxia is worse OR 1,92 OR 1,25 Mortality risk lowest at O2 8 – 10 kPa (60 – 75 mmHg) Mortality risk increase with hypoxia and hyperoxia
Hyperventilation • Hyperventilation => hypocapnia => vasoconstriction => lower CBF and CBV => lower ICP • Vasoconstrictionworsen cerebral ischemia • Hyperventilationonlyafterneurosurgicalconsultation and ifherniation is impending Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Circulation • Systolic BP > 70 + 2 x age • Haemorrhagecontrol • Fluid resuscitation • Krystalloid 20 ml/kg • SAGM 10-20 ml/kg • FFP 10-20 ml/kg • TC 5-10 ml/kg • Vasopressors? Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Resuscitation - fluids • Albumin vssaline • Ringers Lactatevs Saline osmolality 270 vs 308 Sodium 130 vs 154 Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Physiology – cerebral perfusion • Cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) • Mean arterial pressure (MAP) • Intracerebral Pressure (ICP) CPP = MAP - ICP • Level 3 evidence • CPP > 40 mmHg • ICP < 20 mmHg Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Disability - ICP monitoring • ICP < 20 mmHg • No evidencedirectly in favor of ICP monitoring – but: • Childrenwith severe TBI have high ICP • Pooroutcome with intracranialhypertension • Betteroutcome with protocols for treatmentof ICP • Betteroutcome with succesful ICP loweringtherapies Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Anaesthesia • Ketamin • Propofol • Tiopental • Etomidat Increase HR Increase BP Bronchodilatation Decrease cerebral metabolism Cerebral vasoconstriction Inducesystemichypotension => lower CPP Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Anaesthesia • Sevoflurane and Isoflurane • Nitrousoxide Decrease cerebral metabolism Vasodilatation => CBF and CBV Increase cerebral metabolism Increase CBF => ICP Shouldbeavoided Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Neuromuscularblocking agents • Succinylcholine • Increase ICP • Provide rapid optimal conditions for intubation • Cardiacarrytmias • Rocuronium • Optimal drug for paediatricintubation • Reversal with Sugammadex • 0,6-1,0 mg/kg Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Positioning • Improvevenousdrainage • Elevate head 15-30o • Avoidflexion or rotation Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Mannitol • Mannitol 1g/kg - reduce ICP by • Reduces blood viscosity rapidly but transiently < 75 min • Slow osmotic effect over 15-30 min • Movement of water from the brain to the systemic circulation. Effect up to 6 h, but requires a intact BBB • May cause hypotension (osmotic diuresis) • Rebound effect Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hypertonic Saline 3 % • 5 ml/kg • 513 mmol/l Na+, • Osmolality 1027 mOsm/l • Osmotic action in the brain • Restoresintravascularvolume • Increasedinotopy • Increase MAP and CPP Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hyperosmolartherapy • Recommendation level 2 • Hypertonic saline should be considered for treatment of TBI associated with intracranial hypertension. Effective dose for acute use range between 6,5-10ml/kg. • Recommendation level 3 • Hypertonic saline for treatment of intracranial hypertension 3% saline as a continous infusion range between 0,1-1,0 ml/kg/hour. • Mannitolis commonly used but no RCI exists Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hypothermia • Level 2 • Moderate hypothermia (32-33C) beginning early after TBI for only 24 hrs’ duration shold be avoided Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Hypothermia – adverseeffects • Hypotension • Bradycardia • Arrhytmias • Sepsis • Coagulopathy Traumatic Brain Injury in Children
Treatment - Conclusion • Resuscitation • Triage – expeditious • Surgicaltreatment • ICP monitoring and control • Optimization of organ systems Traumatic Brain Injury in Children