Neurogenic Pulmonary Edema Due to Traumatic Brain Injury: Evidence of Cardiac Dysfunction

Author:

Bahloul Mabrouk1,Chaari Anis N.1,Kallel Hatem1,Khabir Abdelmajid1,Ayadi Adnène1,Charfeddine Hanène1,Hergafi Leila1,Chaari Adel D.1,Chelly Hedi E.1,Hamida Chokri Ben1,Rekik Noureddine1,Bouaziz Mounir1

Affiliation:

1. Service de Réanimation Médicale (mb, anc, hk, lh, adc, hec, cbh, nr, mb), Service d’Anatomopathologie (ak), and Service de Médecine Légale (aa), Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Habib Bourguiba, Sfax, Tunisia, and Service de Cardiologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Hédi Chaker, Sfax, Tunisia (hc).

Abstract

• Background Acute neurogenic pulmonary edema, a common and underdiagnosed clinical entity, can occur after virtually any form of injury of the central nervous system and is a potential early contributor to pulmonary dysfunction in patients with head injuries. • Objective To explore myocardial function in patients with evident neurogenic pulmonary edema after traumatic head injury. • Methods During a 1-year period in a university hospital in Sfax, Tunisia, information was collected prospectively on patients admitted to the 22-bed intensive care unit because of isolated traumatic head injury who had neurogenic pulmonary edema. Data included demographic information, vital signs, neurological status, physiological status, and laboratory findings. All of the patients had computed tomography and plain radiography of the neck and determination of cardiac function. • Results All 7 patients in the sample had cardiac dysfunction. Evidence of myocardial damage was confirmed by echocardiography in 3 patients, pulmonary artery catheterization in 3 patients, and/or postmortem myocardial biopsy in 4 patients. Echocardiography studies, repeated 7 days after the initial study in one patient and 90 days afterward in another, showed complete improvement in wall motion, with a left ventricular ejection fraction of 0.65. • Conclusion All patients who had neurogenic pulmonary edema due to traumatic head injury had myocardial dysfunction. The mechanisms of the dysfunction were multiple. The great improvement in wall motion seen in 2 patients indicated the presence of a stunned myocardium. Further studies are needed to understand the mechanisms of this cardiac dysfunction.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

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