Optimizing sedation in patients with acute brain injury

被引:0
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作者
Mauro Oddo
Ilaria Alice Crippa
Sangeeta Mehta
David Menon
Jean-Francois Payen
Fabio Silvio Taccone
Giuseppe Citerio
机构
[1] CHUV-University Hospital,Department of Intensive Care Medicine
[2] Faculty of Biology and Medicine,Neurointensive Care, Department of Emergency and Intensive Care
[3] University of Lausanne,Department of Intensive Care
[4] School of Medicine and Surgery,Department of Medicine and Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine
[5] University of Milan-Bicocca,Division of Anaesthesia, Department of Medicine
[6] San Gerardo Hospital,Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care
[7] Erasme Hospital,undefined
[8] Université Libre de Bruxelles,undefined
[9] Mount Sinai Hospital,undefined
[10] University of Toronto,undefined
[11] University of Cambridge,undefined
[12] Addenbrooke’s Hospital,undefined
[13] Hôpital Michallon,undefined
[14] Grenoble University Hospital,undefined
来源
Critical Care | / 20卷
关键词
Traumatic Brain Injury; Status Epilepticus; Dexmedetomidine; Cerebral Perfusion Pressure; Mean Arterial Blood Pressure;
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摘要
Daily interruption of sedative therapy and limitation of deep sedation have been shown in several randomized trials to reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation and hospital length of stay, and to improve the outcome of critically ill patients. However, patients with severe acute brain injury (ABI; including subjects with coma after traumatic brain injury, ischaemic/haemorrhagic stroke, cardiac arrest, status epilepticus) were excluded from these studies. Therefore, whether the new paradigm of minimal sedation can be translated to the neuro-ICU (NICU) is unclear. In patients with ABI, sedation has ‘general’ indications (control of anxiety, pain, discomfort, agitation, facilitation of mechanical ventilation) and ‘neuro-specific’ indications (reduction of cerebral metabolic demand, improved brain tolerance to ischaemia). Sedation also is an essential therapeutic component of intracranial pressure therapy, targeted temperature management and seizure control. Given the lack of large trials which have evaluated clinically relevant endpoints, sedative selection depends on the effect of each agent on cerebral and systemic haemodynamics. Titration and withdrawal of sedation in the NICU setting has to be balanced between the risk that interrupting sedation might exacerbate brain injury (e.g. intracranial pressure elevation) and the potential benefits of enhanced neurological function and reduced complications. In this review, we provide a concise summary of cerebral physiologic effects of sedatives and analgesics, the advantages/disadvantages of each agent, the comparative effects of standard sedatives (propofol and midazolam) and the emerging role of alternative drugs (ketamine). We suggest a pragmatic approach for the use of sedation-analgesia in the NICU, focusing on some practical aspects, including optimal titration and management of sedation withdrawal according to ABI severity.
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