gms | German Medical Science

66th Annual Meeting of the German Society of Neurosurgery (DGNC)
Friendship Meeting with the Italian Society of Neurosurgery (SINch)

German Society of Neurosurgery (DGNC)

7 - 10 June 2015, Karlsruhe

State of cerebrovascular autoregulation correlates to outcome in severe infant/pediatric traumatic brain injury

Meeting Abstract

  • Konstantin Hockel - Sektion für Pädiatrische Neurochirurgie, Klinik für Neurochirurgie
  • Jennifer Diedler - Sektion für Pädiatrische Neurochirurgie, Klinik für Neurochirurgie
  • Ellen Heimberg - Abteilung für pädiatrische Intensivmedizin, Universitätsklinikum Tübingen
  • Felix Neunhöfer - Abteilung für pädiatrische Intensivmedizin, Universitätsklinikum Tübingen
  • Martin U. Schuhmann - Sektion für Pädiatrische Neurochirurgie, Klinik für Neurochirurgie

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie. 66. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie (DGNC). Karlsruhe, 07.-10.06.2015. Düsseldorf: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House; 2015. DocDI.16.09

doi: 10.3205/15dgnc186, urn:nbn:de:0183-15dgnc1867

Published: June 2, 2015

© 2015 Hockel et al.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. See license information at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.


Outline

Text

Objective: It could be shown in severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) in adults, that the functional status of cerebrovascular autoregulation (AR), determined by the pressure reactivity index (PRx), correlates to outcome. We investigated PRx and its correlation to outcome in infant and pediatric TBI.

Method: Seventeen patients (median 3.2yrs, range 1d-14yrs) with severe TBI (GCS at presentation <9) underwent longtime computerized ICP and MAP monitoring using dedicated software to determine CPP and PRx continuously. Outcome was determined at discharge and at follow-up at 6 months using the Glasgow Outcome Scale.

Results: Median monitoring time was 152h (range 22-355h). 9 patients underwent decompressive craniectomy to control ICP. Favorable outcome (GOS 4 and 5) was reached in 8, unfavorable outcome (GOS 1-3) in 9 patients. When dichotomized to outcome no significant difference was found to overall ICP, CPP and PRx. But mean overall PRx correlated well to outcome (r=-0.70, p=0.001) and tended to be lower for GOS 4 and 5 (-0.10) than GOS 1-3 (0.16). The relative duration of impaired AR (assuming threshold PRx ≥ 0.2) was longer for patients with unfavorable outcome (38 vs. 6 % of monitoring time) (p=0.057). Continuously impaired AR of 24 hours or more was associated with unfavorable outcome in 100% of the patients (n=8).

Conclusions: Integrity of AR seems to play the same fundamental role after TBI in the pediatric population as in adults and should be determined routinely. It carries an important prognostic value. PRx furthermore seems to be the most promising candidate parameter to guide the adjustment of CPP during ICU treatment, aiming at an improvement of cerebrovascular autoregulatory ability to ensure the best possible CBF during the critical phase of increased vulnerability to secondary injury following traumatic brain injury (CPPopt concept).