Decompressive hemicraniectomy improves survival in patients with malignant MCA infarction when compared with earlier reports of conservative treatment alone. Functional outcome and QOL remain markedly impaired, especially among elderly patients and in those with a severe neurological deficit at admission.
There is growing evidence that S-100B protein measured by a simple blood test can be used as a novel biochemical marker of brain cell damage. The objective of our study was to investigate the potential of S-100B measurements to diagnose an acute neurological complication in the analgo-sedated and intubated intensive care patient and the impact on patient management. Serum S-100B levels were serially investigated in 246 neurocritical care patients. Venous blood samples for S-100B determination were obtained as soon as possible after admission and every 24 hours thereafter, for the duration of the stay at the neurocritical care unit. Blood samples were taken every morning as part of the routine laboratory investigation for analysis of S-100B using the immunoluminometric assay (AB Sangtec Medical, Bromma, Sweden) and a fully automated LIAISON system (Byk-Sangtec-Diagnostica, Dietzenbach, Germany) with a short time to result. The primary endpoint of our study was the occurrence of a severe neurological complication. Patients were admitted to the neurosurgical intensive care unit after routine major intracranial surgery in 116 cases (47%) and after a neurological or neurosurgical emergency in 130 cases (53%). Of the latter group, 79 patients (32%) underwent emergency surgery for evacuation or decompression of a space-occupying lesion before ICU admission. A severe neurological complication was defined as a new infarction, new hemorrhage or a newly developed progressive disease despite maximum therapy with a radiologically confirmed increase of mass lesion and midline shift. In 33 patients (13%) a complication with neurological deterioration occurred. All patients showed pathologically increased serum S-100B values (mean 2.00 microg/l, standard deviation 2.61 microg/l, range 0.31-9.66 microg/l). Twenty-eight of these patients (85%) showed S-100B increases >0.5 microg/l. In five cases (16%), the increase in S-100B was the first sign of neurological complication and prompted emergency computed tomography scanning. In another two cases, increasing S-100B values changed management decision towards a surgical intervention. The major finding of our study was the influence of serial S-100B measurement on actual management of the patient in 21% of cases with neurological complications.
BackgroundSupratentorial pneumocephalus after posterior fossa surgery in the semisitting position may lead to decreased alertness and other symptoms. We here aimed to prove the efficacy of normobaric hyperoxia on the absorption of postoperative pneumocephalus according to a standardized treatment protocol.Methods and FindingsWe enrolled 44 patients with postoperative supratentorial pneumocephalus (> 30 ml) after posterior fossa surgery in a semisitting position. After randomisation procedure, patients received either normobaric hyperoxia at FiO2 100% over an endotracheal tube for 3 hours (treatment arm) or room air (control arm). Routine cranial CT scans were performed immediately (CT1) and 24 hours (CT2) after completion of surgery and were rated without knowledge of the therapy arm. Two co-primary endpoints were assessed: (i) mean change of pneumocephalus volume, and (ii) air resorption rate in 24 hours. Secondary endpoints were subjective alertness (Stanford Sleepiness Scale) postoperatively and attention (Stroop test), which were evaluated preoperatively and 24 hours after surgery. The mean change in pneumocephalus volume was higher in patients in the treatment arm as compared to patients in the control arm (p = 0.001). The air resorption rate was higher in patients in the treatment arm as compared to patients in the control arm (p = 0.0015). Differences were more pronounced in patients aged 52 years and older. No difference between patients in treatment arm and control arm was observed for the Stroop test. The distribution of scores in the Stanford Sleepiness Scale differed in the treatment arm as compared to the control arm, and there was a difference in mean values (p = 0.015).ConclusionsAdministration of normobaric hyperoxia at FiO2 100% via an endotracheal tube for 3 hours is safe and efficacious in the treatment of pneumocephalus after posterior fossa surgery in the semisitting position. Largest benefit was found in elderly patients and particularly in older men.Trial RegistrationGerman Clinical Trials Register DRKS00006273
To assess how meteorological conditions favorable for the production of artificial snow vary in time and space, wet-bulb temperatures are calculated using temperature and humidity data of 14 Austrian stations between October and April for 1948-2007 (station altitudes 585-3105 m MSL). Technical specifications of snow guns are used to define a wet-bulb temperature threshold value of 228C for snowmaking and a relationship between wet-bulb temperature and snowmaking capacity. The Mann-Kendall nonparametrictrend test is used to detect monotonic long-term changes in air temperature, relative humidity, wet-bulb temperature, and number of snowmaking days. It is applied multiple times to overlapping time periods to capture significant trends on different time scales. Results show a marked, common air-and wet-bulb seasonal mean (October-April) temperature increase between 11.58 and 13.18C from 1980 to 1990 for a majority of stations with no trends thereafter. The number of snowmaking days per season decreased by 220 to 234 for half of the stations in the period around 1979-2003. No altitudes were especially affected by changes in the analyzed variables. The estimated volume of produced artificial snow shows high interannual variability and exhibits no trends at an hourly resolution over the last two decades.
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