6533b7d2fe1ef96bd125e21b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Effects of a small acute subdural hematoma following traumatic brain injury on neuromonitoring, brain swelling and histology in pigs.

Beat AlessandriA. MeissnerR. Timaru-kastOliver KempskiAxel HeimannB. M. Hoelper

subject

MaleMicrodialysisanimal structuresIntracranial PressureTraumatic brain injurySus scrofaGlutamic AcidBrain EdemaBrain damageEvoked Potentials SomatosensorymedicineAnimalsHematoma Subdural AcuteLactic AcidIntracranial pressureMonitoring Physiologicbusiness.industryGlutamate receptorHistologymedicine.diseasenervous system diseasesDisease Models AnimalSomatosensory evoked potentialAnesthesiaBrain InjuriesCerebrovascular CirculationSurgerymedicine.symptombusinessAcute subdural hematomapsychological phenomena and processes

description

An acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) induces pathomechanisms which worsen outcome after traumatic brain injury, even after a small hemorrhage. Synergistic effects of a small ASDH on brain damage are poorly understood, and were studied here using neuromonitoring for 10 h in an injury model of controlled cortical impact (CCI) and ASDH. Pigs (n = 32) were assigned to 4 groups: sham, CCI (2.5 m/s), ASDH (2 ml) and CCI + ASDH. Intracranial pressure was significantly increased above sham levels by all injuries with no difference between groups. CCI and ASDH reduced ptiO<sub>2</sub> by a maximum of 36 ± 9 and 26 ± 11%, respectively. The combination caused a 31 ± 11% drop. ASDH alone and in combination with CCI caused a significant elevation in extracellular glutamate, which remained increased longer for CCI + ASDH. The same two groups had significantly higher peak lactate levels compared to sham. Somatosensory evoked potential (SSEP) amplitude was persistently reduced by combined injury. These effects translated into significantly elevated brain water content and histological damage in all injury groups. Thus, combined injury had stronger effects on glutamate and SSEP when compared to CCI and ASDH, but no clear-cut synergistic effects of 2 ml ASDH on trauma were observed. We speculate that this was partially due to the CCI injury severity.

10.1159/000330756https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21952222