Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5580189 | Anaesthesia & Intensive Care Medicine | 2017 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Management of acute brain injury is based on a central concept that prevention of secondary hypoxic/ischaemic injury is associated with improved outcomes. While clinical assessment of neurological state remains fundamental to neuromonitoring, several techniques are available for global and regional brain monitoring that provide assessment of cerebral perfusion, oxygenation and metabolic status, and early warning of impending brain hypoxia/ischaemia. Developments in multimodality monitoring have enabled an individually tailored approach to patient management in which treatment decisions are guided by monitored changes in physiological variables rather than pre-defined, generic thresholds. Any impact of monitor-guided therapy on outcomes is entirely dependent on the threshold to initiative intervention and subsequent management in response to change in a particular monitored variable, and these remain undefined in many circumstances. This review describes current neuromonitoring techniques used during the critical care management of acute brain injury.
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Authors
Malcolm E. Smith, Martin Smith,