首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Pulmonary Extravascular Fluid Accumulation following Intracranial Injury
Pulmonary Extravascular Fluid Accumulation following Intracranial Injury

 

作者: ROBERT MACKERSIE,   JANET CHRISTENSEN,   LAWRENCE PITTS,   FRANK LEWIS,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care  (OVID Available online 1983)
卷期: Volume 23, issue 11  

页码: 968-975

 

ISSN:0022-5282

 

年代: 1983

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Previous investigations have reported an 11 to 71% incidence of pulmonary edema following CNS injury, based on post-mortem examinations. No premortem assessment to date has been made of the frequency and severity of in vivo pulmonary fluid accumulation following acute head injury.The thermal green dye technique was used to objectively determine extravascular lung water (EVLW) in 18 comatose patients with severe acute intracranial injuries resulting from trauma or spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage. Patients with aspiration, lung contusion, or pneumonia were excluded from the study. Control values for EVLW were obtained on admission from a group of 13 traumatized patients without head injury or evidence of pulmonary disease or injury. Intracranial injury patients who had EVLW values greater than two standard deviations above the control group mean were considered to have pulmonary edema. The incidence of pulmonary edema in this series was 50% (9/18). Extravascular lung water was determined post mortem in five patients using the gravimetric method of Pearce.The results suggest that pulmonary edema is a distinct clinical event occurring frequently after acute intracranial injury. Edema appears to be mediated by increased pulmonary microvascular permeability, and is not primarily dependent on postinjury changes in intracranial pressure or pulmonary vascular pressures.

 

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