Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica (Dec 2022)

Neurointensive Care of Traumatic Brain Injury Patients Based on Coagulation and Fibrinolytic Parameter Monitoring

  • Ryuta NAKAE,
  • Yasuo MURAI,
  • Yasuhiro TAKAYAMA,
  • Kaoru NAMATAME,
  • Yoshiyuki MATSUMOTO,
  • Takahiro KANAYA,
  • Yu FUJIKI,
  • Hidetaka ONDA,
  • Go SUZUKI,
  • Junya KANEKO,
  • Takashi ARAKI,
  • Yasutaka NAOE,
  • Hidetaka SATO,
  • Kyoko UNEMOTO,
  • Akio MORITA,
  • Hiroyuki YOKOTA,
  • Shoji YOKOBORI

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2176/jns-nmc.2022-0226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 62, no. 12
pp. 535 – 541

Abstract

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Coagulopathy, a common complication of traumatic brain injury (TBI), is characterized by a hypercoagulable state developing immediately after injury, with hyperfibrinolysis and bleeding tendency peaking 3 h after injury, followed by fibrinolysis shutdown. Reflecting this timeframe, the coagulation factor fibrinogen is first consumed and then degraded after TBI, its concentration rapidly decreasing by 3 h post-TBI. The fibrinolytic marker D-dimer reaches its maximum concentration at the same time. Hyperfibrinolysis in the acute phase of TBI is associated with poor prognosis via hematoma expansion. In the acute phase, the coagulation and fibrinolysis parameters must be monitored to determine the treatment strategy. The combination of D-dimer plasma level at admission and the level of consciousness upon arrival at the hospital can be used to predict the patients who will “talk and deteriorate.” Fibrinogen and D-dimer levels should determine case selection and the amount of fresh frozen plasma required for transfusion. Surgery around 3 h after injury, when fibrinolysis and bleeding diathesis peak, should be avoided if possible. In recent years, attempts have been made to estimate the time of injury from the time course of coagulation and fibrinolysis parameter levels, which has been particularly useful in some cases of pediatric abusive head trauma patients.

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