Cases reported "Brain Death"

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1/31. A matter of life and death: what every anesthesiologist should know about the medical, legal, and ethical aspects of declaring brain death.

    Accurate criteria for death are increasingly important as it becomes more difficult for the public to distinguish between patients who are still alive from those who, through the aid of medical technology, merely look like they are alive even though they are dead. patients and their families need to know that a clear line can be drawn between life and death, and that patients who are alive will not be unintentionally treated as though they are dead. For the public to trust the pronouncements of medical doctors as to whether a patient is dead or alive, the criteria must be unambiguous, understandable, and infallible. It is equally important to physicians that accurate, infallible criteria define death. physicians need to know that a clear line can be drawn between life and death so that patients who are dead are not treated as though they are alive. Such criteria enable us to terminate expensive medical care to corpses. Clear criteria for death also allow us to ethically request the gift of vital organs. Clear, infallible criteria allow us to assure families and society that one living person will not be intentionally or unintentionally killed for the sake of another. The pressure of organ scarcity must not lead physicians to allow the criteria for life and death to become blurred because of the irreparable harm this would cause to the patient-physician relationship and the devastating impact it could have on organ transplantation. As the cases presented here illustrate, anesthesiologists have an important responsibility in the process of assuring that some living patients are not sacrificed to benefit others. Criteria for declaring death should be familiar to every anesthesiologist participating in organ retrieval. Before accepting the responsibility of maintaining a donor for vital organ collection, the anesthesiologist should review data supplied in the chart supporting the diagnosis of brain death and seriously question inconsistencies and inadequate testing conditions. knowledge of brain death criteria and proper application of these criteria could have changed the course of each of the cases presented.
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2/31. Brainstem death and ventilator trigger settings.

    A patient with cerebral infarction was certified clinically brainstem dead. However, 4 h after the diagnosis of death, while the patient was being ventilated using the biphasic positive airway pressure mode, the 'assist' indicator light on the Drager Evita 2 ventilator illuminated intermittently. There was no evidence of spontaneous breathing. 'Triggering' was probably caused by a decrease in airway pressure in time with cardiac contraction. The trigger flow rate is crucial as factors other than the patient's inspiratory effort can initiate flow from the ventilator with very sensitive settings.
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3/31. A 35-year-old man with cerebral hemorrhage and pheochromocytoma: the second brain-dead organ donor in japan.

    A 35-year-old man was brought into the emergency room of Keio University Hospital by ambulance because of a sudden onset of coma. His glasgow coma scale was 3 and his blood pressure 150/100 mmHg. CT scanning revealed a subcortical hemorrhage 8 cm in diameter. His respiration deteriorated rapidly, and an emergency craniotomy was performed for hematoma removal and cerebral decompression. Postoperatively the patient remained in a deep coma (GCS = 3) requiring respiratory support. The family presented an organ donor card previously signed by the patient, and brain death was confirmed in accordance with japan's transplant law. As a result of two tests conducted six hours apart brain death was confirmed on the 5th postoperative day. With the family's consent, the donor's heart, kidneys and skin were removed for organ transplantation to be performed in other institutions. An autopsy was performed after the removal of the organs and skin. An extensive subgaleal hemorrhage was found in the left cerebral hemisphere, and microscopic examination revealed extensive necrosis with karyolysis of neuronal cells, but no viable neuronal cells were found in the cerebrum. The brain stem was marked by edema, hemorrhage, infarction necrosis and neuronal cell loss. The cerebellum was swollen and congested and showed autolysis of the granular layer. These findings suggested brain death syndrome with respirator brain. Other autopsy findings included a huge pheochromocytoma in the right adrenal gland, bilateral bronchopneumonia, liver congestion and fatty metamorphosis with four cavernous hemangiomas, and mild chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis. This patient was the second brain-dead organ donor and the first brain-dead patient to undergo postmortem examination in japan.
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4/31. Isolated medulla oblongata function after severe traumatic brain injury.

    The objective was to report the first pathologically confirmed case of partly functionally preserved medulla oblongata in a patient with catastrophic traumatic brain injury.A patient is described with epidural haematoma with normal breathing and blood pressure and a retained coughing reflex brought on only by catheter suctioning of the carina. Multiple contusions in the thalami and pons were found but the medulla oblongata was spared at necropsy. In conclusion, medulla oblongata function may persist despite rostrocaudal deterioration. This comatose state ("medulla man") closely mimics brain death.
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5/31. rCBF in impending brain death.

    Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured in three patients after relief of elevated intracranial pressure and restoration of normal cerebral perfusion pressure. Two patients, studied within 4 hours after closed head injury were found to have marked impairment of cortical blood flow and elevation of cerebrovascular resistance. We suggest that this picture is indicative of impending brain death, and may be the result of a long period of severe cerebral ischemia. The third patient, who had a shorter period of intracranial hypertension occurring during anaesthetic induction, responded to reduction of ICP quite differently with a transient relative hyperaemia. The physiopathological explanations for these two different types of flow response and their possible clinical significance are discussed.
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6/31. Organ recovery from a donor with end-stage renal disease: a case study.

    As the field of transplantation enters the new millennium, maximizing organs per donor remains one of the greatest challenges of procurement. This case study outlines nontraditional medical management techniques that facilitated the recovery of 5 transplantable organs from a patient with end-stage renal disease. Strategies utilized in this case included the use of continuous veno-venous hemodialysis and airway pressure release ventilation to maximize the outcomes of the donation. Although the use of these strategies is admittedly limited to hospitals where the resources are available, this case study suggests that utilizing available resources in any clinical setting can make more organs available to people on the waiting list for solid organ transplantation.
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7/31. Improving oxygenation when conventional ventilation fails: a case study.

    Long periods of significant hypoxia do not disqualify a patient from becoming an organ donor. As the management of organ donor patients becomes more complex, recovery coordinators often have to change their thinking and resort to nonconventional means of management. This case study presents a hypoxic donor and how using pressure-control inverse ratio ventilation improved oxygenation in this donor. Before changing ventilator modes, the transplant surgeons were concerned about the long periods of hypoxia the patient had experienced during her hospitalization. After making the change, improving oxygenation, and demonstrating an improved oxygen state, 4 organs were recovered and subsequently transplanted. All the recovered organs functioned immediately after transplantation without any signs of poor performance. Although this treatment modality is not available at every institution, it can be used to improve oxygenation problems in organ donors.
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8/31. Outcome in children with significantly abnormal cerebral blood flow detected by Doppler ultrasonography: focus on the survivors.

    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The Doppler waveform patterns of loss of diastolic flow, appearance of retrograde diastolic flow, or no detectable flow in the cerebral arteries suggest significantly abnormal cerebral blood flow (CBF). A retrospective study was performed to show that significantly abnormal CBF alone, without clinical criteria, is not necessarily specific to brain death in the young pediatric population. patients AND methods: Forty-seven pediatric patients, from newborn to 4 years of age, were found to have significantly abnormal CBF, including 7 patients with loss of diastolic flow, 28 with retrograde diastolic flow, and 23 with no detectable cerebral flow on serial Doppler sonographic examinations. Their clinical data and sonographic results were collected and analyzed. RESULTS: Forty-two patients died, a few of whom had only transient improvement of cerebral flow. All of the patients with no detectable cerebral flow expired. Five patients survived with or without sequelae. Their underlying conditions that caused increased intracranial pressure were treated by medical and/or surgical intervention, and diastolic reversal of CBF corrected within 1 day in all 5. CONCLUSIONS: Although no detectable flow is a lethal sign, pediatric patients with loss or reversal of diastolic flow may survive with prompt and effective treatment. Using Doppler ultrasound to diagnose cerebral circulatory arrest should be done with caution in pediatric patients.
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9/31. Reversible myocardial dysfunction after traumatic brain injury: mechanisms and implications for heart transplantation.

    Reversible myocardial dysfunction is known to occur in patients with cerebrovascular accidents and brain death. Several mechanisms for transient myocardial dysfunction have been proposed, including increased sympathetic activity, hormone depletion, and a reduction in coronary perfusion pressure. The relative importance of each of these mechanisms remains controversial. We report the case of a 19-year-old man who suffered traumatic brain death associated with reversible myocardial dysfunction despite elevated cardiac enzymes. Myocardial recovery occurred after correcting his hemodynamic instability and hypothermia emphasizing the importance of normalization of coronary perfusion pressure and core body temperature. The mechanisms for reversible myocardial dysfunction and their implications for heart transplantation following traumatic brain death are reviewed. A diagnostic strategy is proposed that would allow early recognition of reversible myocardial dysfunction in brain-dead patients.
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10/31. Intracranial hemorrhage resulting from skull base fracture as a complication of Le Fort III osteotomy.

    Various complications of Le Fort osteotomies have been reported. We describe a lethal complication of Le Fort III osteotomy we encountered in a 9-year-old boy with Crouzon syndrome. A standard Le Fort III osteotomy, including pterygomaxillary dysjunction with a curved osteotome and down-fracture manipulation, was performed uneventfully. When the intraoral buccal wound was closed after fixation of the external midface distraction devices, we discovered hemorrhage originating from the right posterior maxillary region. Although it was stopped with pressure on the osteotomized maxilla, the volume of intraoperative blood loss was nearly 2,000 ml. During the observation period in the intensive care unit, the patient suffered brain death, and he died 3 months later. A computed tomography scan obtained the day after surgery revealed vigorous subarachnoid and intraventricular hemorrhage and transverse fracture of the middle cranial fossa. This skull base fracture was believed to result from intraoperative maneuvers, including the pterygomaxillary dysjunction and down-fracture manipulation. We emphasize the risk of intracranial hemorrhage with Le Fort osteotomy and advise discussing this risk with patients and family members during preoperative consultations.
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