Publication: Actual evidence for neuromonitoring-guided intensive care following severe traumatic brain injury
Actual evidence for neuromonitoring-guided intensive care following severe traumatic brain injury
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Stover, J. F. (2011). Actual evidence for neuromonitoring-guided intensive care following severe traumatic brain injury. Swiss Medical Weekly, 141, w13245. https://doi.org/10.4414/smw.2011.13245
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Therapeutic interventions following severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) are substantially influenced by complex and interwoven pathophysiological cascades involving both, local and systemic alterations. Our main duty is to prevent secondary progression of the primary damage. This, in turn, obliges us to actively search and identify secondary insults related, for example, to hypoxia, hypotension, uncontrolled hyperventilation, anaemia, and hypoglycaemia. During pharmacological coma we must rely on specific cerebral monitoring which is
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Citations
Stover, J. F. (2011). Actual evidence for neuromonitoring-guided intensive care following severe traumatic brain injury. Swiss Medical Weekly, 141, w13245. https://doi.org/10.4414/smw.2011.13245