A Trial of Intracranial-Pressure Monitoring in Traumatic Brain Injury
University of Washington · Harborview Medical Center · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Intracranial-pressure monitoring is considered the standard of care for severe traumatic brain injury and is used frequently, but the efficacy of treatment based on monitoring in improving the outcome has not been rigorously assessed.
We conducted a multicenter, controlled trial in which 324 patients 13 years of age or older who had severe traumatic brain injury and were being treated in intensive care units (ICUs) in Bolivia or Ecuador were randomly assigned to one of two specific protocols: guidelines-based management in which a protocol for monitoring intraparenchymal intracranial pressure was used (pressure-monitoring group) or a protocol in which treatment was based on imaging and clinical examination (imaging-clinical examination group). The primary outcome was a composite of survival time, impaired consciousness, and functional status at 3 months and 6 months and neuropsychological status at 6 months; neuropsychological status was assessed by an examiner who was unaware of protocol assignment. This composite measure was based on performance across 21 measures of functional and cognitive status and calculated as a percentile (with 0 indicating the worst performance, and 100 the best performance).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 60.55
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
15- RMRandall M. ChesnutCorresponding
University of Washington, Harborview Medical Center, Neurological Surgery
- NTNancy Temkin
University of Washington
- NCNancy Carney
Institute for Medical Informatics and Biostatistics
- SDSureyya Dikmen
University of Washington
- CRCarlos Rondina
Hospital de Emergencias Dr. Clemente Álvarez
Topics & keywords
- Traumatic brain injury
- Intracranial pressure monitoring
- Intracranial pressure
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Standard of care
- Anesthesia
- Surgery
- Good health and well-being