keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36052625/operation-neuroteam-rendering-the-absolute-best-care-for-the-most-deserving-patients-under-the-most-difficult-conditions
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Danielle D Dang, Jason H Boulter, Melissa R Meister, John V Dang, Geoffrey Ling, James Ecklund
The tenets of neurosurgery worldwide, whether in the civilian or military sector, espouse vigilance, the ability to adapt, extreme ownership, and, of course, an innate drive for developing a unique set of technical skills. At a time in history when the complexity of battlefield neurotrauma climaxed coupled with a chronic shortage of military neurosurgeons, modernized solutions were mandated in order to deliver world-class neurological care to our servicemen and servicewomen. Complex blast injuries, as caused by an increased incidence of improvised explosive devices, yielded widespread systemic inflammatory responses with multiorgan damage...
September 2022: Neurosurgical Focus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36036899/association-of-neurocritical-care-services-with-mortality-and-functional-outcomes-for-adults-with-brain-injury-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiuxian Pham, Jason Ray, Ary Serpa Neto, Joshua Laing, Piero Perucca, Patrick Kwan, Terence J O'Brien, Andrew A Udy
IMPORTANCE: Neurocritical care (NCC) aims to improve the outcomes of critically ill patients with brain injury, although the benefits of such subspecialized care are yet to be determined. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the association of NCC with patient-centered outcomes in adults with acute brain injury who were admitted to intensive care units (ICUs). The protocol was preregistered on PROSPERO (CRD42020177190). DATA SOURCES: Three electronic databases were searched (Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials) from inception through December 15, 2021, and by citation chaining...
October 1, 2022: JAMA Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35946020/implementing-a-neurotrauma-registry-in-latin-america-and-the-caribbean
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Myron L Rolle, Deen L Garba, Dylan P Griswold, Laura L Fernández, Diana M Sánchez, Angelica Clavijo, Andrés M Rubiano
Background  Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has a disproportionately greater impact in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). One strategy to reduce the burden of disease in LMICs is through the implementation of a trauma registry that standardizes the assessment of each patient's management of care. Objective  This study aims to ascertain the interest of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) nations in establishing a shared neurotrauma registry in the regional block, based on an existing framework for collaboration...
July 2022: Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35840003/an-interdisciplinary-reappraisal-of-delirium-and-proposed-subtypes
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark A Oldham, Arjen J C Slooter, E Wesley Ely, Cathy Crone, José R Maldonado, Lisa J Rosenthal
An interdisciplinary plenary session entitled "Rethinking and Rehashing Delirium" was held during the 2021 Annual Meeting of the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry to facilitate dialog on the prevalent approach to delirium. Panel members included a psychiatrist, neurointensivist, and critical care specialist, and attendee comments were solicited with the goal of developing a statement. Discussion was focused on a reappraisal of delirium and, in particular, its disparate terminology and history in relation to acute encephalopathy...
2023: Journal of the Academy of Consultation—Liaison Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35831731/surge-capacity-in-the-covid-19-era-a-natural-experiment-of-neurocritical-care-in-general-critical-care
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steven Philips, Yuyang Shi, Craig M Coopersmith, Owen B Samuels, Cederic Pimentel-Farias, Yajun Mei, Ofer Sadan, Feras Akbik
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 surges led to significant challenges in ensuring critical care capacity. In response, some centers leveraged neurocritical care (NCC) capacity as part of the surge response, with neurointensivists providing general critical care for patients with COVID-19 without neurologic illness. The relative outcomes of NCC critical care management of patients with COVID-19 remain unclear and may help guide further surge planning and provide broader insights into general critical care provided in NCC units...
July 13, 2022: Neurocritical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35798091/eighteen-hour-inhibitory-effect-of-s-ketamine-on-potassium-and-ischemia-induced-spreading-depolarizations-in-the-gyrencephalic-swine-brain
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Renán Sánchez-Porras, Modar Kentar, Roland Zerelles, Martina Geyer, Carlos Trenado, Jed A Hartings, Johannes Woitzik, Jens P Dreier, Edgar Santos
Spreading depolarizations (SDs) are characterized by near-complete breakdown of the transmembrane ion gradients, cytotoxic edema, and glutamate release. SDs are associated with poor neurological outcomes in cerebrovascular diseases and brain trauma. Ketamine, a N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist, has shown to inhibit SDs in animal models and in humans. However, little is known about its SD-inhibitory effect during long-term administration. Lissencephalic animal models have shown that ketamine loses its SD-blocking effect after some minutes to hours...
July 4, 2022: Neuropharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35314970/prognostication-of-icu-patients-by-providers-with-and-without-neurocritical-care-training
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Finley Caulfield, Michael Mlynash, Irina Eyngorn, Maarten G Lansberg, Anousheh Afjei, Chitra Venkatasubramanian, Marion S Buckwalter, Karen G Hirsch
BACKGROUND: Predictions of functional outcome in neurocritical care (NCC) patients impact care decisions. This study compared the predictive values (PVs) of good and poor functional outcome among health care providers with and without NCC training. METHODS: Consecutive patients who were intubated for  ≥ 72 h with primary neurological illness or neurological complications were prospectively enrolled and followed for 6-month functional outcome...
August 2022: Neurocritical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35073589/teleneuroicu-expanding-the-reach-of-subspecialty-neurocritical-care
#28
REVIEW
W David Freeman, Ashley Rogers, Alejandro Rabinstein
Telemedicine is a rapidly growing field of medicine due to a combination of high-speed global telecommunication systems and accessibility of small, fast mobile computing platforms with bidirectional audiovisual camera capabilities. Teleneurology is a subset of telemedicine. TeleNeuroICU, one form of teleneurology, is the practice of virtually consulting on patients in the ICU setting with neurological and neurosurgical conditions. Given the current and future shortage of neurologists and neurointensivists, there is a high demand for TeleNeuroICU services around the globe and this is expected to increase in the future...
February 2022: Seminars in Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34902087/does-thomas-willis-resonate-with-neurointensivists-some-thoughts-400-years-after-his-birthdate
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eelco F M Wijdicks
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
December 2021: Neurocritical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34618764/acute-neurologic-manifestations-of-respiratory-viruses
#30
REVIEW
Michael A Pizzi
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Understanding the pathophysiology of COVID-19 and the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus that causes the disease has demonstrated the complexity of acute respiratory viruses that can cause neurologic manifestations. This article describes the most common respiratory viruses that have neurologic manifestations, with a focus on SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19. RECENT FINDINGS: In vitro and in vivo studies have better elucidated the neurotropism of various respiratory viruses...
October 1, 2021: Continuum: Lifelong Learning in Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34218234/usefulness-of-the-four-scale-to-assess-the-state-of-consciousness-of-the-patients-treated-in-the-intensive-care-unit
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Slawomir Zarzycki, Michal Sobstyl, Marek Prokopienko, Artur Pasik, Przemyslaw Ciesielski, Pawel Gogol, Janusz Skoczylas
The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is a widely adopted clinical scale which fails to assess a verbal component in intensive care units (ICUs) patients who are ventilated mechanically. AIM: The aim of the study was to evaluate the validity of the FOUR scale (Full Outline of UnResponsivness) when applied by staff of an ICU. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This prospective cohort study included 65 consecutive intubated patients treated in the ICU with brain damage. The study design included the simultaneous assessment of the patients' consciousness by two scales - the FOUR scale and the GCS...
June 16, 2021: Polski Merkuriusz Lekarski: Organ Polskiego Towarzystwa Lekarskiego
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34147572/early-head-ct-in-post-cardiac-arrest-patients-a-helpful-tool-or-contributor-to-self-fulfilling-prophecy
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rachel Beekman, Carolina B Maciel, Cora H Ormseth, Sonya E Zhou, Daniela Galluzzo, Laura C Miyares, Victor M Torres-Lopez, Seyedmehdi Payabvash, Adrian Mak, David M Greer, Emily J Gilmore
OBJECTIVE: Neuroprognostication guidelines suggest that early head computed tomography (HCT) might be useful in the evaluation of cardiac arrest (CA) patients following return of spontaneous circulation. We aimed to determine the impact of early HCT, performed within the first 6 h following CA, on decision-making following resuscitation. METHODS: We identified a cohort of initially unconscious post-CA patients at a tertiary care academic medical center from 2012 to 2017...
August 2021: Resuscitation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34093380/localizing-clinical-patterns-of-blast-traumatic-brain-injury-through-computational-modeling-and-simulation
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Scott T Miller, Candice F Cooper, Paul Elsbernd, Joseph Kerwin, Ricardo Mejia-Alvarez, Adam M Willis
Blast traumatic brain injury is ubiquitous in modern military conflict with significant morbidity and mortality. Yet the mechanism by which blast overpressure waves cause specific intracranial injury in humans remains unclear. Reviewing of both the clinical experience of neurointensivists and neurosurgeons who treated service members exposed to blast have revealed a pattern of injury to cerebral blood vessels, manifested as subarachnoid hemorrhage, pseudoaneurysm, and early diffuse cerebral edema. Additionally, a seminal neuropathologic case series of victims of blast traumatic brain injury (TBI) showed unique astroglial scarring patterns at the following tissue interfaces: subpial glial plate, perivascular, periventricular, and cerebral gray-white interface...
2021: Frontiers in Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34070236/clinical-implications-of-neurological-comorbidities-and-complications-in-icu-patients-with-covid-19
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jaeseok Park, Yong-Shik Kwon, Hyun-Ah Kim, Doo-Hyuk Kwon, Jihye Hwang, Seong-Hwa Jang, Hyungjong Park, Sung-Il Sohn, Huimahn Alex Choi, Jeong-Ho Hong
Clinical implications of neurological problems during intensive care unit (ICU) care for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients are unknown. This study aimed to describe the clinical implications of preexisting neurological comorbidities and new-onset neurological complications in ICU patients with COVID-19. ICU patients who were isolated and treated for COVID-19 between 19 February 2020 and 3 May 2020, from one tertiary hospital and one government-designated branch hospital were included. Clinical data including previous neurological disorders were extracted from electronic medical records...
May 25, 2021: Journal of Clinical Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33992178/metabolic-values-precluding-clinical-death-by-neurologic-criteria-brain-death-survey-of-neurocritical-care-society-physicians
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David P Lerner, Ribal Bassil, Aleksey Tadevosyan, Anil Ramineni, Joseph D Burns, James A Russell, Panayiotis N Varelas, Ariane Lewis
BACKGROUND: There are no established ranges for metabolic values prior to death by neurologic criteria/brain death determination (DNC/BD) and the thresholds required by institutional protocols and accepted by neurointensivists is unknown. METHODS: We designed a survey that addressed 1) the metabolic tests required in institutional guidelines prior to brain death determination, 2) the metabolic tests the respondent reviewed prior to brain death determination, and 3) the metabolic test thresholds for laboratory tests that were perceived to preclude or permit clinical DNC/BD determination...
June 2021: Journal of Clinical Neuroscience: Official Journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33968467/reliability-of-the-telemedicine-examination-in-the-neurologic-diagnosis-of-death
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph M Darby, Lori A Shutter, Jonathan Elmer, Mohammad Hirzallah, Namir Khandker, Bradley J Molyneaux, A Murat Kaynar, Karen R Nigra, Lawrence R Wechsler
Objective: To determine whether telemedicine technology can be used to reliably determine the neurologic diagnosis of death (NDD) in patients with catastrophic brain injury (CBI). Methods: We included a convenience sample of patients with CBI at a single academic medical center from November 2016 through June 2018. We simultaneously performed brain death evaluation at the bedside and remotely via telemedicine. Remote examiners were neurointensivists who were experienced and knowledgeable in the NDD...
February 2021: Neurology. Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33895369/near-infrared-spectroscopy-in-neurocritical-care-a-review-of-recent-updates
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dmitriy Viderman, Yerkin G Abdildin
Neurocritical diseases and conditions are common causes of long-term disability and mortality. Early recognition and management of neurocritically ill patients is a significant challenge for neurosurgeons, neurologists, and neurointensivists. Although cerebral angiography, magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, and radionuclide imaging are useful in neuromonitoring and neuroimaging, they have several important limitations: they are not readily available, cannot be used for a continuous assessment of cerebral function, and frequently require patient transport to the radiological department...
July 2021: World Neurosurgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33852541/improving-safety-and-quality-during-interhospital-transfer-of-patients-with-nontraumatic-intracranial-hemorrhage-a-simulation-based-pilot-program
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica M Ray, Ambrose H Wong, Emily B Finn, Kevin N Sheth, Charles C Matouk, Stephanie N Sudikoff, Marc A Auerbach, John E Sather, Arjun K Venkatesh
BACKGROUND: The presentation of critically ill patients to emergency departments often necessitates interhospital transfer (IHT) to a tertiary care center for specialized neurocritical care. Patients with nontraumatic intracranial hemorrhage represent a critically ill population subject to high rates of IHT and who is thus an important target for research and quality improvement of IHT. We describe the use of an innovative simulation methodology engaging transfer staff, clinicians, and stakeholders to refine and facilitate the adoption of a standardized IHT protocol for transferring patients with neurovascular emergencies...
April 14, 2021: Journal of Patient Safety
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33727269/do-neurocritical-care-units-improve-outcomes-for-brain-injured-adults-a-protocol-for-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiuxian Pham, Jason Ray, Ary Serpa Neto, Andrew Udy
INTRODUCTION: Neurocritical care is a rapidly developing subspecialty within intensive care medicine which aims to improve outcomes of critically ill neurological patients. This has inspired the formation of specialised intensive care units or services to provide dedicated care of brain-injured patients, as well as new training pathways for physicians. However, expansion has been variable worldwide and it is yet to be determined if there are clear benefits in regard to patient outcomes...
March 16, 2021: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33681649/proposal-to-optimize-evaluation-and-treatment-of-febrile-infection-related-epilepsy-syndrome-fires-a-report-from-fires-workshop
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sookyong Koh, Elaine Wirrell, Annamaria Vezzani, Rima Nabbout, Eyal Muscal, Marios Kaliakatsos, Ronny Wickström, James J Riviello, Andreas Brunklaus, Eric Payne, Antonio Valentin, Elizabeth Wells, Jessica L Carpenter, Kihyeong Lee, Yi-Chen Lai, Krista Eschbach, Craig A Press, Mark Gorman, Coral M Stredny, William Roche, Tara Mangum
Febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome (FIRES) is a rare catastrophic epileptic encephalopathy that presents suddenly in otherwise normal children and young adults causing significant neurological disability, chronic epilepsy, and high rates of mortality. To suggest a therapy protocol to improve outcome of FIRES, workshops were held in conjunction with American Epilepsy Society annual meeting between 2017 and 2019. An international group of pediatric epileptologists, pediatric neurointensivists, rheumatologists and basic scientists with interest and expertise in FIRES convened to propose an algorithm for a standardized approach to the diagnosis and treatment of FIRES...
March 2021: Epilepsia Open
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