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Get Free AccessAbstract Background Brain hypoxia can occur after spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), even when levels of intracranial pressure (ICP) remain normal. Brain tissue oxygenation (PbtO2) can be measured as a part of a neurological multimodal neuromonitoring Low PbtO2 has been associated with poor neurologic recovery. There is scarce data on the impact of PbtO 2 guided-therapy on patients’ outcome. Methods This single-center cohort study (June 2014-March 2020) included all patients admitted to the ICU after SAH who required multimodal monitoring. Patients with imminent brain death were excluded. Our primary goal was to assess the impact of PbtO 2 -guided therapy on neurological outcome. Secondary outcome included the association of brain hypoxia with outcome. Results Of the 163 patients that underwent ICP monitoring, 62 were monitored with PbtO 2 and 54 (87%) had at least one episode of brain hypoxia. In patients that required treatment based on neuromonitoring strategies, PbtO 2 -guided therapy (OR 0.33 [CI 95% 0.12–0.90]) compared to ICP-guided therapy had a protective effect on neurological outcome at 6 months. Brain hypoxia was associated with unfavorable neurological (OR 4.51 [95% CI 1.17–17.45]). Conclusions In this cohort of SAH patients, PbtO 2 -guided therapy when compared to ICP guided therapy may be associated with improved long-term neurological outcome.
Elisa Gouvêa Bogossian, Daniela Diaferia, Narcisse Ndieugnou Djangang, Marco Menozzi, Jean Louis Vincent, Marta Talamonti, O. Dewitte, Lorenzo Peluso, Sami Barrit, Mejdeddine Al Barajraji, Joachim André, Sophie Schuind, Jacques Créteur, Fabio Silvio Taccone (2021). Brain Tissue Oxygenation Guided Therapy and Outcome in Non-Traumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-228515/v1.
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Type
Preprint
Year
2021
Authors
14
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-228515/v1
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