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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

On severe traumatic brain injury : aspects of an intra cranial pressure-targeted therapy based on the Lund concept

Olivecrona, Magnus January 2008 (has links)
Severe Traumatic Brain Injury (sTBI) is a major cause of mortality and morbidity. At the Department of Neurosurgery Umeå University Hospital subjects with sTBI are treated with an intracranial pressure (ICP) guided therapy based on physiological principles, aiming to optimise the microcirculation of the brain so avoiding secondary brain injuries. The investigations in this thesis are unique in the sense that all patients with sTBI were treated according to the guidelines of an ICP targeted therapy based on the “Lund concept”. As the treatment is based on normalisation of the ICP, the accuracy and reliability of the measuring device is of outmost importance. Therefore the accuracy, drift, and complications related to the measuring device was prospectively studied (n=128). The drift was 0,9 ± 0,2 mmHg during a mean of 7,2 ± 0,4 days and the accuracy high. No clinical significant complications were noted. In 1997 uni- or bilateral decompressive hemi-craniectomy (DC) was introduced into the treatment guidelines. The effect of DC on the ICP and outcome was retrospectively analysed for subjects with sTBI treated 1998-2001. In the subjects who underwent DC the ICP was 36,4 mmHg immediately before and 12,6 mmHg immediately after the DC. The ICP then levelled out at just above 20 mmHg. The ICP was significant lower during the 72 hours following DC. The outcome did not differ between subjects who had undergone DC or not. Subclinical electroencephalographic seizures and status epilepticus have been reported to be common in subjects treated for traumatic brain injury (TBI). This can negatively influence the outcome giving rise to secondary brain injuries. The occurrence of seizures in subjects treated for TBI using continuous EEG monitoring was therefore prospectively studied. During 7334 hours of EEG recording in 47 patients no electroencephalographic seizures were observed. Theoretically, and based on animal studies, prostacyclin (PGI2) can improve the microcirculation of the brain, decreasing the risk for secondary ischaemic brain injury. PGI2 was introduced to the treatment in a prospective randomised double blinded study (epoprostenol 0,5 ng/kg/min). The effect of PGI1 pkt was analysed using the lactate/pyruvate ratio (L/P) measured by cerebral microdialysis in order to study the energy metabolism in the brain. The outcome was measured as Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) at 3 months follow-up. Forty-eight subjects were included. The L/P was pathological high during the first day, thereafter decreasing. There was no significant difference in L/P or outcome between the treated and non-treated group. At 3 months the mortality was 12,5% (95,8% was discharged alive from the ICU), and favourable outcome (GOS 4-5) was 52%. In the same study the brain injury biomarkers S-100B and NSE were followed twice a day for five days to evaluate brain injury and investigate the possible use of these biomarkers for outcome prediction. Initially the biomarkers were elevated to pathological levels which decreased over time. The biomarkers were significant elevated in subjects with Glasgow Coma Scale 3 (GCS) and GOS 1 compared with subjects with GCS 4-8 and GOS 2–5, respectively. A correlation to outcome was found but this correlation could not be used to predict clinical outcome. It is concluded that the ICP measurements are valid and the treatment protocol is a safe and solid protocol, yielding among the best reported results in the world, in regard to favourable outcome as well as in regard to mortality. Epoprostenol in the given dose was not shown to have any effects on the microdialysis parameters nor the clinical outcome. In sTBI L/P and brain injury biomarkers can not be used to predict the final outcome.
2

Kognition nach malignem Infarkt der Arteria cerebri media und dekompressiver Hemikarniektomie / Cognition after malignant media infarction and decompressive hemicraniectomy

Heinemann, Trutz 08 October 2012 (has links)
No description available.
3

Normothermia after decompressive surgery for space-occupying middle cerebral artery infarction: a protocol-based approach

Rahmig, Jan, Kuhn, Matthias, Neugebauer, Hermann, Jüttler, Eric, Reichmann, Heinz, Schneider, Hauke 05 June 2018 (has links) (PDF)
Background Moderate hypothermia after decompressive surgery might not be beneficial for stroke patients. However, normothermia may prove to be an effective method of enhancing neurological outcomes. The study aims were to evaluate the application of a pre-specified normothermia protocol in stroke patients after decompressive surgery and its impact on temperature load, and to describe the functional outcome of patients at 12 months after treatment. Methods We analysed patients with space-occupying middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction treated with decompressive surgery and a pre-specified temperature management protocol. Patients treated primarily with device-controlled normothermia or hypothermia were excluded. The individual temperature load above 36.5 °C was calculated for the first 96 h after hemicraniectomy as the Area Under the Curve, using °C x hours. The effect of temperature load on functional outcome at 12 months was analysed by logistic regression. Results We included 40 stroke patients treated with decompressive surgery (mean [SD] age: 58.9 [10.1] years; mean [SD] time to surgery: 30.5 [16.7] hours). Fever (temperature > 37.5 °C) developed in 26 patients during the first 96 h after surgery and mean (SD) temperature load above 36.5 °C in this time period was 62,3 (+/− 47,6) °C*hours. At one year after stroke onset, a moderate to moderately severe disability (modified Rankin Scale score of 3 or 4) was observed in 32% of patients, and a severe disability (score of 5) in 37% of patients, respectively. The lethality in the cohort at 12 months was 32%. The temperature load during the first 96 h was not an independent predictor for 12 month lethality (OR 0.986 [95%-CI:0.967–1.002]; p < 0.12). Conclusions Temperature control in surgically treated patients with space-occupying MCA infarction using a pre-specified protocol excluding temperature management systems resulted in mild hyperthermia between 36.8 °C and 37.2 °C and a low overall temperature load. Future prospective studies on larger cohorts comparing different strategies for normothermia treatment including temperature management devices are needed.
4

Crises epilépticas e epilepsia após acidente vascular cerebral isquêmico com uso de terapia de reperfusão (rt-PA) ou hemicraniectomia descompressiva

Brondani, Rosane January 2015 (has links)
Base teórica: O Acidente Vascular Cerebral (AVC) é a causa mais comum de novos diagnósticos de epilepsia no idoso. Embora a epilepsia pós-AVC seja um fenômeno clínico reconhecido há muito tempo, seguem muitas questões não resolvidas. Além disso, nas últimas duas décadas, o tratamento do AVC isquêmico sofreu mudanças radicais com a introdução da trombólise e da hemicraniectomia descompressiva (HD) para o tratamento do infarto maligno de artéria cerebral média (ACM). As consequências destas duas novas abordagens terapêuticas nas características da epilepsia pós-AVC ainda são pouco exploradas. Objetivo: Estudar as características e estimar fatores de risco para as crises epilépticas ou a epilepsia pós-AVC em pacientes submetidos ao tratamento agudo (Estudo 1) ou HD para infarto maligno de ACM (Estudo 2). Métodos: O estudo 1 é uma coorte de 153 pacientes submetidos a trombólise. Variáveis estudadas incluiram fatores de risco para o AVC e variáveis associadas ao AVC isquêmico agudo e trombólise. Utilizamos a análise de regressão de Cox para o estudo das variáveis que se associaram de forma independente com crises epilépticas, epilepsia pós-AVC e o desfecho do AVC. O estudo 2 é também uma coorte que retrospectivamente avaliou 36 pacientes com infarto maligno de ACM tratados com HD. Tempo, incidência e fatores de risco para crises epilépticas e desenvolvimento de epilepsia foram analisados. Resultados: Estudo 1: 74 pacientes (48,4%) eram mulheres; média de idade foi 67,2 anos (DP=13,1). Média do NIHSS na chegada foi 10,95 (DP=6,25) e 2,09 (DP=3,55) após 3 meses. Transformação hemorrágica ocorreu em 22 (14,4%) dos pacientes. Foi considerado desfecho bom classificação na escala modificada de Rankin (mRS) 0-1, sendo encontrado em 87 (56,9%) dos pacientes. Vinte e um pacientes (13,7%) tiveram crises epilépticas e 15 (9,8%) desenvolveram epilepsia após a trombólise. Crises epilépticas foram associadas de forma independente com transformação hemorrágica e desfecho não favorável (mRS ≥ 2) em três meses após o AVC. Transformação hemorrágica e mRS ≥ 2 avaliados em 3 meses, associaram-se de forma independente com epilepsia pós-AVC. Crises epilépticas surgiram como um fator de risco independente para desfecho pobre. Estudo 2. A média de seguimento dos pacientes foi de 1.086 (DP= 1.172) dias. Nove pacientes morreram antes de receberem alta hospitalar e no período de um ano, 11 pacientes haviam morrido. Quase 60% alcançaram mRS ≤ 4. Treze pacientes desenvolveram crises dentro da primeira semana após o AVC. No total, crises epilépticas ocorreram em 22 (61%) dos 36 pacientes. Dezenove pacientes (56%) dos 34, sobreviveram ao período agudo e desenvolveram epilepsia após infarto da ACM e HD. Questionamos aos pacientes ou responsáveis se eles se arrependeram de terem autorizado a HD no momento do AVC. Também foi perguntado se eles autorizariam a HD novamente. Trinta e dois (89%) não se arrependeram de ter autorizado a HD no momento do infarto agudo da ACM, e autorizaria novamente em retrospecto. Conclusão: Confirmamos que as frequências de crises ou epilepsia pós-AVC e trombolítico são comparáveis com as frequências das décadas da era pré-trombólise e confirmamos a alta incidência de crises epilépticas e epilepsia após infartos malignos de ACM submetidos a HD. Em nosso estudo, as crises epilépticas associaram-se de forma independente com pior prognóstico após terapia trombolítica. / Background: The most common cause of newly diagnosed epilepsies in the elderly is stroke. Although post-stroke epilepsy is a well-studied stroke complication, many questions remain unsolved. In addition, during the past two decades, the treatment of stroke has changed dramatically with the introduction of thrombolysis for treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC) for malignant middle cerebral artery infarction (MCA). The consequences of these two new therapeutic approaches for characteristics of post-stroke epilepsy remains poorly explored. Objective: To study characteristics and estimate risk factors for acute seizures or post-stroke epilepsy in patients submitted to thrombolysis for treatment of acute stroke (Study 1) or DHC for malignant MCA infarction. Methods: Study 1 is a cohort study of 153 patients submitted to thrombolysis. Variables studied included risk factors for stroke, and variables related to acute stroke and thrombolysis. Variables independently associated with seizures, pos-stroke epilepsy or stroke outcome were defined using Cox regression analysis. Study 2 is also a cohort study that retrospectively assessed 36 patients with malignant stroke of the MCA submitted to DHC. Timing, incidence and plausible risk factors for seizure and epilepsy development were analyzed in these patients. Results: Study 1. Seventy-four patients (48.4%) were female; mean age of patients was 67.2 years-old (SD=13.1). Initial NIHSS mean score was 10.95 (SD=6.25) and 2.09 (SD=3.55) after three months. Hemorrhagic transformation occurred in 22 (14.4%) patients. A good outcome, as defined by a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) of 0-1, was observed in 87 (56.9%) patients. Twenty one (13.7%) patients had seizures and 15 (9.8%) patients developed epilepsy after thrombolysis. Seizures were independently associated with hemorrhagic transformation and with mRS ≥ 2 three months after stroke. Hemorrhagic transformation and unfavorable outcome, as measured by mRS ≥ 2 after three months, were variables independently associated with post-stroke epilepsy. Seizures emerged as an independent factor for poor outcome in stroke thrombolysis. Study 2. Mean patient follow-up time was of 1.086 (SD=1.172) days. Nine patients died before being discharged and after one year eleven patients died. Almost 60% had the modified Rankin score ≤ 4. Thirteen patients developed seizures within the first week after stroke. In total, seizures occurred in 22 (61%) of 36 patients. Nineteen patients (56%) out of 34 patients who survived the acute period developed epilepsy after MCA infarcts and DHC. Also, we asked patients or the person responsible for them whether they regretted, in retrospect, having authorized DHC at the time of the stroke. It was also asked whether they would authorize DHC again. Thirty- two (89%) did not regret having authorized DHC at the time of acute MCA infarct, and would authorize DHC again in retrospect. Conclusion: We confirm that seizures or post-stroke epilepsy rates after thrombolysis are comparable with rates from pre-thrombolysis decades and a high incidence of seizures and epilepsy after malignant MCA infarcts submitted to DHC. In our study, seizures were an independent risk factor associated with worst outcome after thrombolysis therapy.
5

Crises epilépticas e epilepsia após acidente vascular cerebral isquêmico com uso de terapia de reperfusão (rt-PA) ou hemicraniectomia descompressiva

Brondani, Rosane January 2015 (has links)
Base teórica: O Acidente Vascular Cerebral (AVC) é a causa mais comum de novos diagnósticos de epilepsia no idoso. Embora a epilepsia pós-AVC seja um fenômeno clínico reconhecido há muito tempo, seguem muitas questões não resolvidas. Além disso, nas últimas duas décadas, o tratamento do AVC isquêmico sofreu mudanças radicais com a introdução da trombólise e da hemicraniectomia descompressiva (HD) para o tratamento do infarto maligno de artéria cerebral média (ACM). As consequências destas duas novas abordagens terapêuticas nas características da epilepsia pós-AVC ainda são pouco exploradas. Objetivo: Estudar as características e estimar fatores de risco para as crises epilépticas ou a epilepsia pós-AVC em pacientes submetidos ao tratamento agudo (Estudo 1) ou HD para infarto maligno de ACM (Estudo 2). Métodos: O estudo 1 é uma coorte de 153 pacientes submetidos a trombólise. Variáveis estudadas incluiram fatores de risco para o AVC e variáveis associadas ao AVC isquêmico agudo e trombólise. Utilizamos a análise de regressão de Cox para o estudo das variáveis que se associaram de forma independente com crises epilépticas, epilepsia pós-AVC e o desfecho do AVC. O estudo 2 é também uma coorte que retrospectivamente avaliou 36 pacientes com infarto maligno de ACM tratados com HD. Tempo, incidência e fatores de risco para crises epilépticas e desenvolvimento de epilepsia foram analisados. Resultados: Estudo 1: 74 pacientes (48,4%) eram mulheres; média de idade foi 67,2 anos (DP=13,1). Média do NIHSS na chegada foi 10,95 (DP=6,25) e 2,09 (DP=3,55) após 3 meses. Transformação hemorrágica ocorreu em 22 (14,4%) dos pacientes. Foi considerado desfecho bom classificação na escala modificada de Rankin (mRS) 0-1, sendo encontrado em 87 (56,9%) dos pacientes. Vinte e um pacientes (13,7%) tiveram crises epilépticas e 15 (9,8%) desenvolveram epilepsia após a trombólise. Crises epilépticas foram associadas de forma independente com transformação hemorrágica e desfecho não favorável (mRS ≥ 2) em três meses após o AVC. Transformação hemorrágica e mRS ≥ 2 avaliados em 3 meses, associaram-se de forma independente com epilepsia pós-AVC. Crises epilépticas surgiram como um fator de risco independente para desfecho pobre. Estudo 2. A média de seguimento dos pacientes foi de 1.086 (DP= 1.172) dias. Nove pacientes morreram antes de receberem alta hospitalar e no período de um ano, 11 pacientes haviam morrido. Quase 60% alcançaram mRS ≤ 4. Treze pacientes desenvolveram crises dentro da primeira semana após o AVC. No total, crises epilépticas ocorreram em 22 (61%) dos 36 pacientes. Dezenove pacientes (56%) dos 34, sobreviveram ao período agudo e desenvolveram epilepsia após infarto da ACM e HD. Questionamos aos pacientes ou responsáveis se eles se arrependeram de terem autorizado a HD no momento do AVC. Também foi perguntado se eles autorizariam a HD novamente. Trinta e dois (89%) não se arrependeram de ter autorizado a HD no momento do infarto agudo da ACM, e autorizaria novamente em retrospecto. Conclusão: Confirmamos que as frequências de crises ou epilepsia pós-AVC e trombolítico são comparáveis com as frequências das décadas da era pré-trombólise e confirmamos a alta incidência de crises epilépticas e epilepsia após infartos malignos de ACM submetidos a HD. Em nosso estudo, as crises epilépticas associaram-se de forma independente com pior prognóstico após terapia trombolítica. / Background: The most common cause of newly diagnosed epilepsies in the elderly is stroke. Although post-stroke epilepsy is a well-studied stroke complication, many questions remain unsolved. In addition, during the past two decades, the treatment of stroke has changed dramatically with the introduction of thrombolysis for treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC) for malignant middle cerebral artery infarction (MCA). The consequences of these two new therapeutic approaches for characteristics of post-stroke epilepsy remains poorly explored. Objective: To study characteristics and estimate risk factors for acute seizures or post-stroke epilepsy in patients submitted to thrombolysis for treatment of acute stroke (Study 1) or DHC for malignant MCA infarction. Methods: Study 1 is a cohort study of 153 patients submitted to thrombolysis. Variables studied included risk factors for stroke, and variables related to acute stroke and thrombolysis. Variables independently associated with seizures, pos-stroke epilepsy or stroke outcome were defined using Cox regression analysis. Study 2 is also a cohort study that retrospectively assessed 36 patients with malignant stroke of the MCA submitted to DHC. Timing, incidence and plausible risk factors for seizure and epilepsy development were analyzed in these patients. Results: Study 1. Seventy-four patients (48.4%) were female; mean age of patients was 67.2 years-old (SD=13.1). Initial NIHSS mean score was 10.95 (SD=6.25) and 2.09 (SD=3.55) after three months. Hemorrhagic transformation occurred in 22 (14.4%) patients. A good outcome, as defined by a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) of 0-1, was observed in 87 (56.9%) patients. Twenty one (13.7%) patients had seizures and 15 (9.8%) patients developed epilepsy after thrombolysis. Seizures were independently associated with hemorrhagic transformation and with mRS ≥ 2 three months after stroke. Hemorrhagic transformation and unfavorable outcome, as measured by mRS ≥ 2 after three months, were variables independently associated with post-stroke epilepsy. Seizures emerged as an independent factor for poor outcome in stroke thrombolysis. Study 2. Mean patient follow-up time was of 1.086 (SD=1.172) days. Nine patients died before being discharged and after one year eleven patients died. Almost 60% had the modified Rankin score ≤ 4. Thirteen patients developed seizures within the first week after stroke. In total, seizures occurred in 22 (61%) of 36 patients. Nineteen patients (56%) out of 34 patients who survived the acute period developed epilepsy after MCA infarcts and DHC. Also, we asked patients or the person responsible for them whether they regretted, in retrospect, having authorized DHC at the time of the stroke. It was also asked whether they would authorize DHC again. Thirty- two (89%) did not regret having authorized DHC at the time of acute MCA infarct, and would authorize DHC again in retrospect. Conclusion: We confirm that seizures or post-stroke epilepsy rates after thrombolysis are comparable with rates from pre-thrombolysis decades and a high incidence of seizures and epilepsy after malignant MCA infarcts submitted to DHC. In our study, seizures were an independent risk factor associated with worst outcome after thrombolysis therapy.
6

Crises epilépticas e epilepsia após acidente vascular cerebral isquêmico com uso de terapia de reperfusão (rt-PA) ou hemicraniectomia descompressiva

Brondani, Rosane January 2015 (has links)
Base teórica: O Acidente Vascular Cerebral (AVC) é a causa mais comum de novos diagnósticos de epilepsia no idoso. Embora a epilepsia pós-AVC seja um fenômeno clínico reconhecido há muito tempo, seguem muitas questões não resolvidas. Além disso, nas últimas duas décadas, o tratamento do AVC isquêmico sofreu mudanças radicais com a introdução da trombólise e da hemicraniectomia descompressiva (HD) para o tratamento do infarto maligno de artéria cerebral média (ACM). As consequências destas duas novas abordagens terapêuticas nas características da epilepsia pós-AVC ainda são pouco exploradas. Objetivo: Estudar as características e estimar fatores de risco para as crises epilépticas ou a epilepsia pós-AVC em pacientes submetidos ao tratamento agudo (Estudo 1) ou HD para infarto maligno de ACM (Estudo 2). Métodos: O estudo 1 é uma coorte de 153 pacientes submetidos a trombólise. Variáveis estudadas incluiram fatores de risco para o AVC e variáveis associadas ao AVC isquêmico agudo e trombólise. Utilizamos a análise de regressão de Cox para o estudo das variáveis que se associaram de forma independente com crises epilépticas, epilepsia pós-AVC e o desfecho do AVC. O estudo 2 é também uma coorte que retrospectivamente avaliou 36 pacientes com infarto maligno de ACM tratados com HD. Tempo, incidência e fatores de risco para crises epilépticas e desenvolvimento de epilepsia foram analisados. Resultados: Estudo 1: 74 pacientes (48,4%) eram mulheres; média de idade foi 67,2 anos (DP=13,1). Média do NIHSS na chegada foi 10,95 (DP=6,25) e 2,09 (DP=3,55) após 3 meses. Transformação hemorrágica ocorreu em 22 (14,4%) dos pacientes. Foi considerado desfecho bom classificação na escala modificada de Rankin (mRS) 0-1, sendo encontrado em 87 (56,9%) dos pacientes. Vinte e um pacientes (13,7%) tiveram crises epilépticas e 15 (9,8%) desenvolveram epilepsia após a trombólise. Crises epilépticas foram associadas de forma independente com transformação hemorrágica e desfecho não favorável (mRS ≥ 2) em três meses após o AVC. Transformação hemorrágica e mRS ≥ 2 avaliados em 3 meses, associaram-se de forma independente com epilepsia pós-AVC. Crises epilépticas surgiram como um fator de risco independente para desfecho pobre. Estudo 2. A média de seguimento dos pacientes foi de 1.086 (DP= 1.172) dias. Nove pacientes morreram antes de receberem alta hospitalar e no período de um ano, 11 pacientes haviam morrido. Quase 60% alcançaram mRS ≤ 4. Treze pacientes desenvolveram crises dentro da primeira semana após o AVC. No total, crises epilépticas ocorreram em 22 (61%) dos 36 pacientes. Dezenove pacientes (56%) dos 34, sobreviveram ao período agudo e desenvolveram epilepsia após infarto da ACM e HD. Questionamos aos pacientes ou responsáveis se eles se arrependeram de terem autorizado a HD no momento do AVC. Também foi perguntado se eles autorizariam a HD novamente. Trinta e dois (89%) não se arrependeram de ter autorizado a HD no momento do infarto agudo da ACM, e autorizaria novamente em retrospecto. Conclusão: Confirmamos que as frequências de crises ou epilepsia pós-AVC e trombolítico são comparáveis com as frequências das décadas da era pré-trombólise e confirmamos a alta incidência de crises epilépticas e epilepsia após infartos malignos de ACM submetidos a HD. Em nosso estudo, as crises epilépticas associaram-se de forma independente com pior prognóstico após terapia trombolítica. / Background: The most common cause of newly diagnosed epilepsies in the elderly is stroke. Although post-stroke epilepsy is a well-studied stroke complication, many questions remain unsolved. In addition, during the past two decades, the treatment of stroke has changed dramatically with the introduction of thrombolysis for treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) and decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC) for malignant middle cerebral artery infarction (MCA). The consequences of these two new therapeutic approaches for characteristics of post-stroke epilepsy remains poorly explored. Objective: To study characteristics and estimate risk factors for acute seizures or post-stroke epilepsy in patients submitted to thrombolysis for treatment of acute stroke (Study 1) or DHC for malignant MCA infarction. Methods: Study 1 is a cohort study of 153 patients submitted to thrombolysis. Variables studied included risk factors for stroke, and variables related to acute stroke and thrombolysis. Variables independently associated with seizures, pos-stroke epilepsy or stroke outcome were defined using Cox regression analysis. Study 2 is also a cohort study that retrospectively assessed 36 patients with malignant stroke of the MCA submitted to DHC. Timing, incidence and plausible risk factors for seizure and epilepsy development were analyzed in these patients. Results: Study 1. Seventy-four patients (48.4%) were female; mean age of patients was 67.2 years-old (SD=13.1). Initial NIHSS mean score was 10.95 (SD=6.25) and 2.09 (SD=3.55) after three months. Hemorrhagic transformation occurred in 22 (14.4%) patients. A good outcome, as defined by a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) of 0-1, was observed in 87 (56.9%) patients. Twenty one (13.7%) patients had seizures and 15 (9.8%) patients developed epilepsy after thrombolysis. Seizures were independently associated with hemorrhagic transformation and with mRS ≥ 2 three months after stroke. Hemorrhagic transformation and unfavorable outcome, as measured by mRS ≥ 2 after three months, were variables independently associated with post-stroke epilepsy. Seizures emerged as an independent factor for poor outcome in stroke thrombolysis. Study 2. Mean patient follow-up time was of 1.086 (SD=1.172) days. Nine patients died before being discharged and after one year eleven patients died. Almost 60% had the modified Rankin score ≤ 4. Thirteen patients developed seizures within the first week after stroke. In total, seizures occurred in 22 (61%) of 36 patients. Nineteen patients (56%) out of 34 patients who survived the acute period developed epilepsy after MCA infarcts and DHC. Also, we asked patients or the person responsible for them whether they regretted, in retrospect, having authorized DHC at the time of the stroke. It was also asked whether they would authorize DHC again. Thirty- two (89%) did not regret having authorized DHC at the time of acute MCA infarct, and would authorize DHC again in retrospect. Conclusion: We confirm that seizures or post-stroke epilepsy rates after thrombolysis are comparable with rates from pre-thrombolysis decades and a high incidence of seizures and epilepsy after malignant MCA infarcts submitted to DHC. In our study, seizures were an independent risk factor associated with worst outcome after thrombolysis therapy.
7

Normothermia after decompressive surgery for space-occupying middle cerebral artery infarction: a protocol-based approach

Rahmig, Jan, Kuhn, Matthias, Neugebauer, Hermann, Jüttler, Eric, Reichmann, Heinz, Schneider, Hauke 05 June 2018 (has links)
Background Moderate hypothermia after decompressive surgery might not be beneficial for stroke patients. However, normothermia may prove to be an effective method of enhancing neurological outcomes. The study aims were to evaluate the application of a pre-specified normothermia protocol in stroke patients after decompressive surgery and its impact on temperature load, and to describe the functional outcome of patients at 12 months after treatment. Methods We analysed patients with space-occupying middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction treated with decompressive surgery and a pre-specified temperature management protocol. Patients treated primarily with device-controlled normothermia or hypothermia were excluded. The individual temperature load above 36.5 °C was calculated for the first 96 h after hemicraniectomy as the Area Under the Curve, using °C x hours. The effect of temperature load on functional outcome at 12 months was analysed by logistic regression. Results We included 40 stroke patients treated with decompressive surgery (mean [SD] age: 58.9 [10.1] years; mean [SD] time to surgery: 30.5 [16.7] hours). Fever (temperature > 37.5 °C) developed in 26 patients during the first 96 h after surgery and mean (SD) temperature load above 36.5 °C in this time period was 62,3 (+/− 47,6) °C*hours. At one year after stroke onset, a moderate to moderately severe disability (modified Rankin Scale score of 3 or 4) was observed in 32% of patients, and a severe disability (score of 5) in 37% of patients, respectively. The lethality in the cohort at 12 months was 32%. The temperature load during the first 96 h was not an independent predictor for 12 month lethality (OR 0.986 [95%-CI:0.967–1.002]; p < 0.12). Conclusions Temperature control in surgically treated patients with space-occupying MCA infarction using a pre-specified protocol excluding temperature management systems resulted in mild hyperthermia between 36.8 °C and 37.2 °C and a low overall temperature load. Future prospective studies on larger cohorts comparing different strategies for normothermia treatment including temperature management devices are needed.

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