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Erschienen in: Neurocritical Care 2/2011

01.04.2011 | Original Article

Intracerebral Monitoring of Silent Infarcts After Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

verfasst von: Raimund Helbok, Ravi Chandra Madineni, Michael J. Schmidt, Pedro Kurtz, Luis Fernandez, Sang-Bae Ko, Alex Choi, Morgan R. Stuart, E. Sander Connolly, Kiwon Lee, Neeraj Badjatia, Stephan A. Mayer, Alexander G. Khandji, Jan Claassen

Erschienen in: Neurocritical Care | Ausgabe 2/2011

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Abstract

Background

Silent infarction is common in poor-grade subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) patients and associated with poor outcome. Invasive neuromonitoring devices may detect changes in cerebral metabolism and oxygenation.

Methods

From a consecutive series of 32 poor-grade SAH patients we identified all CT-scans obtained during multimodal neuromonitoring and analyzed microdialysis parameters and brain tissue oxygen tension (PbtO2) preceding CT-scanning.

Results

Eighteen percent of the reviewed head-CTs (12/67) revealed new infarcts. Of the eight infarcts in the vascular territory of the neuromonitoring, seven were clinically silent. Neuromonitoring changes preceding radiological evidence of infarction included lactate-pyruvate-ratio elevation and brain glucose decreases when compared to those with distant or no ischemia (P ≤ 0.03, respectively). PbtO2 was lower, but this did not reach statistical significance.

Conclusions

These data suggest that there may be distinct changes in brain metabolism and oxygenation associated with the development of silent infarction within the monitored vascular territory in poor-grade SAH patients. Larger prospective studies are needed to determine whether treatment triggered by neuromonitoring data has an impact on outcome.
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Metadaten
Titel
Intracerebral Monitoring of Silent Infarcts After Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
verfasst von
Raimund Helbok
Ravi Chandra Madineni
Michael J. Schmidt
Pedro Kurtz
Luis Fernandez
Sang-Bae Ko
Alex Choi
Morgan R. Stuart
E. Sander Connolly
Kiwon Lee
Neeraj Badjatia
Stephan A. Mayer
Alexander G. Khandji
Jan Claassen
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2011
Verlag
Humana Press Inc
Erschienen in
Neurocritical Care / Ausgabe 2/2011
Print ISSN: 1541-6933
Elektronische ISSN: 1556-0961
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-010-9472-9

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