Moderate and Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
- PMID: 34618760
- DOI: 10.1212/CON.0000000000001036
Moderate and Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
Abstract
Purpose of review: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) encompasses a group of heterogeneous manifestations of a disease process with high neurologic morbidity and, for severe TBI, high probability of mortality and poor neurologic outcomes. This article reviews TBI in neurocritical care, hence focusing on moderate and severe TBI, and includes an up-to-date review of the many variables to be considered in clinical care.
Recent findings: With advances in medicine and biotechnology, understanding of the impact of TBI has substantially elucidated the distinction between primary and secondary brain injury. Consequently, care of TBI is evolving, with intervention-based modalities targeting multiple physiologic variables. Multimodality monitoring to assess intracranial pressure, cerebral oxygenation, cerebral metabolism, cerebral blood flow, and autoregulation is at the forefront of such advances.
Summary: Understanding the anatomic and physiologic principles of acute brain injury is necessary in managing moderate to severe TBI. Management is based on the prevention of secondary brain injury from resultant trauma. Care of patients with TBI should occur in a dedicated critical care unit with subspecialty expertise. With the advent of multimodality monitoring and targeted biomarkers in TBI, patient outcomes have a higher probability of improving in the future.
Copyright © 2021 American Academy of Neurology.
References
-
- Rubiano AM, Carney N, Chesnut R, Puyana JC. Global neurotrauma research challenges and opportunities. Nature 2015;527(7578):S193–S197. doi:10.1038/nature16035 - DOI
-
- Iaccarino C, Carretta A, Nicolosi F, Morselli C. Epidemiology of severe traumatic brain injury. J Neurosurg Sci 2018;62(5):535–541. doi:10.23736/S0390-5616.18.04532-0 - DOI
-
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Report to congress on traumatic brain injury in the United States: epidemiology and rehabilitation. Atlanta, GA: Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 2015.
-
- Nguyen R, Fiest KM, McChesney J, et al. The international incidence of traumatic brain injury: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Can J Neurol Sci 2016;43(6):774–785. doi:10.1017/cjn.2016.290 - DOI
-
- Capone-Neto A, Rizoli SB. Linking the chain of survival: trauma as a traditional role model for multisystem trauma and brain injury. Curr Opin Crit Care 2009;15(4):290–294. doi:10.1097/MCC.0b013e32832e383e - DOI
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials