Multimodal brain monitoring following traumatic brain injury: A primer for intensive care practitioners

Author:

Casault Colin1ORCID,Couillard Philippe12,Kromm Julie12,Rosenthal Eric3,Kramer Andreas12,Brindley Peter4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada

2. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada

3. Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

4. Department of Neurology, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common and potentially devastating. Traditional examination-based patient monitoring following TBI may be inadequate for frontline clinicians to reduce secondary brain injury through individualized therapy. Multimodal neurologic monitoring (MMM) offers great potential for detecting early injury and improving outcomes. By assessing cerebral oxygenation, autoregulation and metabolism, clinicians may be able to understand neurophysiology during acute brain injury, and offer therapies better suited to each patient and each stage of injury. Hence, we offer this primer on brain tissue oxygen monitoring, pressure reactivity index monitoring and cerebral microdialysis. This narrative review serves as an introductory guide to the latest clinically-relevant evidence regarding key neuromonitoring techniques.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Critical Care

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