Ghaly Ramsis F, Haroutanian Armen, Khamooshi Parnia, Patricoski Jessica, Candido Kenneth D, Knezevic Nebojsa Nick
Department of Anesthesiology, Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center, Chicago, United States.
Ghaly Neurosurgical Associates, Aurora, United States.
Surg Neurol Int. 2020 Apr 25;11:85. doi: 10.25259/SNI_65_2020. eCollection 2020.
In this article, we discuss the dramatic decline in the utilization of invasive cranial monitoring of patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI).
A 52-year-old male presented with a severe TBI following a motor vehicle accident. The initial computed tomography scan showed a subdural hematoma, and the patient underwent a craniotomy. However, preoperatively, intraoperatively, and postoperatively, the critical care team never utilized invasive cranial monitoring. Therefore, when the patient expired several weeks later due to multiorgan failure, his death was in part attributed to the neurocritical care specialists' failure to employ invasive cranial monitoring techniques.
Evidence-based and defensive medicine, cost containment, and a lack of leadership have contributed to neurocritical care specialists' increased failure to utilize invasive hemodynamic and neurological monitoring for TBI.