Roh David, Park Soojin
Department of Neurology and Neurocritical Care, Columbia University, 177 Fort Washington Ave, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep. 2016 Jun;16(6):56. doi: 10.1007/s11910-016-0659-0.
The challenges posed by acute brain injury (ABI) involve the management of the initial insult in addition to downstream inflammation, edema, and ischemia that can result in secondary brain injury (SBI). SBI is often subclinical, but can be detected through physiologic changes. These changes serve as a surrogate for tissue injury/cell death and are captured by parameters measured by various monitors that measure intracranial pressure (ICP), cerebral blood flow (CBF), brain tissue oxygenation (PbtO2), cerebral metabolism, and electrocortical activity. In the ideal setting, multimodality monitoring (MMM) integrates these neurological monitoring parameters with traditional hemodynamic monitoring and the physical exam, presenting the information needed to clinicians who can intervene before irreversible damage occurs. There are now consensus guidelines on the utilization of MMM, and there continue to be new advances and questions regarding its use. In this review, we examine these recommendations, recent evidence for MMM, and future directions for MMM.
急性脑损伤(ABI)带来的挑战不仅包括对初始损伤的处理,还涉及可能导致继发性脑损伤(SBI)的下游炎症、水肿和缺血。SBI通常是亚临床的,但可通过生理变化检测到。这些变化可作为组织损伤/细胞死亡的替代指标,并通过各种监测仪测量的参数来捕捉,这些监测仪可测量颅内压(ICP)、脑血流量(CBF)、脑组织氧合(PbtO2)、脑代谢和皮层电活动。在理想情况下,多模态监测(MMM)将这些神经监测参数与传统血流动力学监测及体格检查相结合,为临床医生提供在不可逆损伤发生前进行干预所需的信息。目前已有关于MMM应用的共识指南,并且在其使用方面不断有新进展和问题出现。在本综述中,我们将审视这些建议、MMM的最新证据以及MMM的未来发展方向。