Liberation from Mechanical Ventilation and Tracheostomy Practice in Traumatic Brain Injury

被引:0
|
作者
Alejandro A. Rabinstein
Raphael Cinotti
Julian Bösel
机构
[1] Mayo Clinic,Department of Neurology
[2] CHU Nantes,Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care
[3] Nantes Université,Methods in Patient
[4] University of Nantes,Centered Outcomes and Health Research
[5] University of Tours,Department of Neurology
[6] INSERM,Department of Neurology
[7] Kassel General Hospital,undefined
[8] Heidelberg University Hospital,undefined
来源
Neurocritical Care | 2023年 / 38卷
关键词
Traumatic brain injury; Mechanical ventilation; Extubation; Liberation; Weaning; Tracheostomy;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Liberating patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) from mechanical ventilation is often a challenging task. These patients frequently require prolonged ventilation and have persistent alterations in the level and content of consciousness. Questions about their ability to protect their airway are common. Pulmonary complications and copious respiratory secretions are also very prevalent. Thus, it is hardly surprising that rates of extubation failure are high. This is a major problem because extubation failure is associated with a host of poor outcome measures. When the safety of an extubation attempt is uncertain, direct tracheostomy is favored by some, but there is no evidence that this practice leads to better outcomes. Current knowledge is insufficient to reliably predict extubation outcomes in TBI, and practices vary substantially across trauma centers. Yet observational studies provide relevant information that must be weighted when considering the decision to attempt extubation in patients with head injury. This review discusses available evidence on liberation from mechanical ventilation in TBI, proposes priorities for future research, and offers practical advice to guide decisions at the bedside.
引用
收藏
页码:439 / 446
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Predictors and outcomes of tracheostomy after traumatic brain injury
    McKenna, John William
    Wilson, Laura D.
    Song, Yanna
    Davidson, Mario A.
    Humble, Stephen S.
    Ehrenfeld, Jesse M.
    Guillamondegui, Oscar D.
    Pandharipande, Pratik P.
    Patel, Mayur B.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2013, 217 (03) : S69 - S69
  • [22] Indicators for tracheostomy in patients with traumatic brain injury - Discussion
    Albrecht, RM
    Meredith, JW
    Scholten
    Gurkin, MA
    AMERICAN SURGEON, 2002, 68 (04) : 328 - 329
  • [23] Tracheostomy in Mechanical Ventilation
    Terragni, Pierpaolo
    Faggiano, Chiara
    Martin, Erica L.
    Ranieri, V. Marco
    SEMINARS IN RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2014, 35 (04) : 482 - 491
  • [24] Factors associated with liberation from home mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy decannulation in infants and children with severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia
    Agarwal, Amit
    Manimtim, Winston M.
    Alexiou, Stamatia
    Abman, Steven H.
    Akangire, Gangaram
    Aoyama, Brianna C.
    Austin, Eric D.
    Baker, Christopher D.
    Bansal, Manvi
    Bauer, Sarah E.
    Cristea, A. Ioana
    Dawson, Sara K.
    Fierro, Julie L.
    Hayden, Lystra P.
    Henningfeld, Jennifer K.
    Kaslow, Jacob A.
    Lai, Khanh V.
    Levin, Jonathan C.
    McKinney, Robin L.
    Miller, Audrey N.
    Nelin, Leif D.
    Popova, Antonia P.
    Siddaiah, Roopa
    Tracy, Michael C.
    Villafranco, Natalie M.
    McGrath-Morrow, Sharon A.
    Collaco, Joseph M.
    JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY, 2024,
  • [25] Liberation from mechanical ventilation - A decade of progress
    Manthous, CA
    Schmidt, GA
    Hall, JB
    CHEST, 1998, 114 (03) : 886 - 901
  • [26] Clinical review: Liberation from mechanical ventilation
    Mohamad F El-Khatib
    Pierre Bou-Khalil
    Critical Care, 12
  • [27] Liberation from mechanical ventilation in the neurocritically ill
    Lazaridis, Christos
    Hays, Angela N.
    Neyens, Ron
    Chalela, Julio A.
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2009, 37 (04) : 1531 - 1531
  • [28] Early tracheostomy in traumatic brain injury: conundrum continues...
    Sharma, Ravi
    Sharma, Prateek
    Katiyar, Varidh
    Vora, Zainab
    Gurjar, Hitesh
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY, 2018, 32 (02) : 127 - 127
  • [29] Early versus late tracheostomy in patients with traumatic brain injury
    Taiki Hoshino
    Hiroshi Yonekura
    Yuki Nakamori
    Masataka Kamei
    Intensive Care Medicine, 2020, 46 : 1286 - 1287
  • [30] Early versus late tracheostomy in patients with traumatic brain injury
    Hoshino, Taiki
    Yonekura, Hiroshi
    Nakamori, Yuki
    Kamei, Masataka
    INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE, 2020, 46 (06) : 1286 - 1287