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Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case

BACKGROUND: The occurrence of traumatic brain injury with spinal cord injury (SCI) in polytrauma patients is associated with significant morbidity. Clinicians face challenges from a decision-making and rehabilitative perspective. Management is complex and understudied. Treatment should be systematic...

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Autores principales: Deng, Hansen, Luy, Diego D., Abou-Al-Shaar, Hussam, Yue, John K., Zinn, Pascal O., Puccio, Ava M., Okonkwo, David O.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association of Neurological Surgeons 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9379735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36130580
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/CASE21521
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author Deng, Hansen
Luy, Diego D.
Abou-Al-Shaar, Hussam
Yue, John K.
Zinn, Pascal O.
Puccio, Ava M.
Okonkwo, David O.
author_facet Deng, Hansen
Luy, Diego D.
Abou-Al-Shaar, Hussam
Yue, John K.
Zinn, Pascal O.
Puccio, Ava M.
Okonkwo, David O.
author_sort Deng, Hansen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The occurrence of traumatic brain injury with spinal cord injury (SCI) in polytrauma patients is associated with significant morbidity. Clinicians face challenges from a decision-making and rehabilitative perspective. Management is complex and understudied. Treatment should be systematic beginning at the scene, focusing on airway resuscitation and hemodynamic stabilization, immobilization, and timely transport. Early operative interventions should be provided, followed by minimizing secondary pathophysiology. The authors present a case to delineate decision-making in the treatment of combined cranial and spinal trauma. OBSERVATIONS: A 19-year-old man presented as a level I trauma patient after falling 30 feet as the result of scaffolding collapse. The patient was unresponsive and was intubated; he had an initial Glasgow Coma Scale score of 4. Computed tomography revealed multicompartmental bleeding and herniation, for which supra- and infratentorial decompressive craniectomies were performed. The patient also suffered from thoracic SCI that resulted in complete paraplegia. Multimodality monitoring was used. After stabilization and lengthy rehabilitation, the patient obtained significant functional improvement. LESSONS: The approach to initial management of concomitant head and spine trauma is to establish intracranial stability followed by intraspinal stability. Patients can make considerable recovery, particularly younger patients, who are more likely to benefit from early aggressive interventions and medical treatment.
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spelling pubmed-93797352022-10-04 Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case Deng, Hansen Luy, Diego D. Abou-Al-Shaar, Hussam Yue, John K. Zinn, Pascal O. Puccio, Ava M. Okonkwo, David O. J Neurosurg Case Lessons Case Lesson BACKGROUND: The occurrence of traumatic brain injury with spinal cord injury (SCI) in polytrauma patients is associated with significant morbidity. Clinicians face challenges from a decision-making and rehabilitative perspective. Management is complex and understudied. Treatment should be systematic beginning at the scene, focusing on airway resuscitation and hemodynamic stabilization, immobilization, and timely transport. Early operative interventions should be provided, followed by minimizing secondary pathophysiology. The authors present a case to delineate decision-making in the treatment of combined cranial and spinal trauma. OBSERVATIONS: A 19-year-old man presented as a level I trauma patient after falling 30 feet as the result of scaffolding collapse. The patient was unresponsive and was intubated; he had an initial Glasgow Coma Scale score of 4. Computed tomography revealed multicompartmental bleeding and herniation, for which supra- and infratentorial decompressive craniectomies were performed. The patient also suffered from thoracic SCI that resulted in complete paraplegia. Multimodality monitoring was used. After stabilization and lengthy rehabilitation, the patient obtained significant functional improvement. LESSONS: The approach to initial management of concomitant head and spine trauma is to establish intracranial stability followed by intraspinal stability. Patients can make considerable recovery, particularly younger patients, who are more likely to benefit from early aggressive interventions and medical treatment. American Association of Neurological Surgeons 2022-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9379735/ /pubmed/36130580 http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/CASE21521 Text en © 2022 The authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Case Lesson
Deng, Hansen
Luy, Diego D.
Abou-Al-Shaar, Hussam
Yue, John K.
Zinn, Pascal O.
Puccio, Ava M.
Okonkwo, David O.
Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
title Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
title_full Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
title_fullStr Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
title_full_unstemmed Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
title_short Critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
title_sort critical care for concomitant severe traumatic brain injury and acute spinal cord injury in the polytrauma patient: illustrative case
topic Case Lesson
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9379735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36130580
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/CASE21521
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