Dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane use in emergent craniectomies shows minimal dural adhesions

Author:

Endicott Luke1,Ehresman Jeff2,Tettelbach William34567,Forsyth Allyn89,Lee Bryan S210

Affiliation:

1. Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine, Glendale, AZ, US

2. Barrow Neurosurgical Institute, Department of Neurosurgery, Phoenix, AZ, US

3. Duke University School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Durham, NC, US

4. American Professional Wound Care Association, LA, US

5. Association for the Advancement of Wound Care, WI, US

6. HCA Healthcare, Mountain Division, Salt Lake City, UT, US

7. Western University of Health Sciences, College of Podiatric Medicine, Pomona, CA, US

8. MIMEDX Group, Inc., Marietta, GA, US

9. Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, US

10. HonorHealth Neuroscience Research Institute, Phoenix, AZ, US

Abstract

Decompressive craniectomies (DCs) are routinely performed neurosurgical procedures to emergently treat increased intracranial pressure secondary to multiple aetiologies, such as subdural haematoma, epidural haematoma, or malignant oedema in the setting of acute infarction. The DC procedure typically induces epidural fibrosis post-cranial resection, resulting in adherence of the dura to both the brain internally and skin flap externally. This becomes especially problematic in the setting of skull flap replacement for cranioplasty as adherences can lead to bridging vein tear, damage to the underlying brain cortex, and other postoperative complications. Dural adjuvants, which can contribute to decreased rate of adherence formation, can thereby reduce both postoperative cranioplasty complications and operative duration. Dehydrated human amnion/chorion membrane (DHACM) allografts (AMNIOFIX, MIMEDX Group Inc., US) have been shown to reduce the rate of dural scar tissue formation in re-exploration of posterior lumbar interbody fusion operations which require entry into the epidural space. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether or not the use of DHACM in the setting of emergent craniectomies decreased the rate of dural adhesion formation and subsequent cranioplasty complications. Patients (n=7) who underwent emergent craniectomy and intraoperative placement of DHACM were evaluated during replacement of either an autologous skull cap or a custom-made implant, at which point the degree of adhesions was qualitatively assessed. Placement of DHACM below and on top of the dura resulted in negligible adhesion being found during the defect exposure, and there were no intraoperative complications during cranioplasties. Reported estimated blood loss across the seven patients averaged 64.2ml, total operative time averaged 79.2 minutes, and time dedicated to exposing defect for bone flap placement was <3 minutes.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Fundamentals and skills

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