TBI Pathophys & Assessment - Brain Under Pressure
- Pathophysiology:
- Primary Injury: Immediate mechanical damage (contusion, Diffuse Axonal Injury - DAI). Irreversible.
- Secondary Injury: Evolves post-trauma; key factors: hypoxia (PaO₂ <60 mmHg), hypotension (SBP <90 mmHg), ↑Intracranial Pressure (ICP), cerebral edema. Potentially treatable.
- Monro-Kellie Doctrine: Intracranial volume (Brain parenchyma, Blood, CSF) is fixed. An ↑ in one component requires a ↓ in others to maintain normal ICP.
- ICP: Normal 5-15 mmHg. Sustained ↑ICP >20 mmHg is critical & requires treatment.
- Cerebral Perfusion Pressure: $CPP = MAP - ICP$. Target 50-70 mmHg. Avoid CPP <50 mmHg.
- Assessment:
- Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS): Eye (E1-4), Verbal (V1-5), Motor (M1-6). Total 3-15.
- Severe TBI: GCS 3-8 (Intubate if GCS ≤8)
- Moderate TBI: GCS 9-12
- Mild TBI: GCS 13-15
- Pupillary Examination: Size, symmetry, reactivity to light. Unilateral fixed dilated pupil suggests uncal herniation.
- Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS): Eye (E1-4), Verbal (V1-5), Motor (M1-6). Total 3-15.
⭐ Cushing's Triad (late sign of markedly ↑ICP & impending brainstem herniation):
- Hypertension (often with widened pulse pressure)
- Bradycardia
- Irregular respirations (e.g., Cheyne-Stokes)
Anesthetic Goals & Pre-op - Code Grey Guardian
- Physiological Targets (Maintain Homeostasis):
- ICP: < 20-22 mmHg.
- CPP: 60-70 mmHg ($CPP = MAP - ICP$).
- MAP: > 80 mmHg (adults), age-specific for peds.
- PaO2: > 100 mmHg (avoid hypoxia).
- PaCO2: 35-40 mmHg (normocapnia; avoid routine hyperventilation).
- Glucose: 140-180 mg/dL.
- Temperature: Normothermia (36-37.5°C).
- Pre-anesthetic Management (📌 "CRANIUM"):
- C-spine: Assume injury, Manual In-Line Stabilization (MILS) for intubation.
- RSI: Preferred for airway control.
- Induction: Etomidate (0.3 mg/kg, neuroprotective, hemodynamically stable) or Ketamine (1-2 mg/kg, if hypotensive; use with caution if ICP known to be very high).
- Paralytic: Rocuronium (1.2 mg/kg) or Succinylcholine (1.5 mg/kg, beware fasciculations/ICP rise).
- Avoid Hypotension & Hypoxia: Critical to prevent secondary brain injury.
- Neurological Assessment: GCS, pupils, deficits.
- ICP Monitoring/Management: Elevate head of bed 30°, neutral neck.
- Urine Output & Fluids: Maintain euvolemia.
- Mannitol/Hypertonic Saline: If signs of herniation or acutely ↑ICP.

⭐ The 'lethal triad' in trauma-acidosis, hypothermia, and coagulopathy-significantly worsens TBI outcomes by exacerbating secondary brain injury and complicating neurosurgical interventions.
Intraoperative Management - Neuro-Anesthesia Navigator
- Key Goals: Maintain CPP >60-70 mmHg; MAP >80 mmHg; PaO2 >100 mmHg; PaCO2 35-40 mmHg; Normothermia; Euglycemia.
- Anesthetic Choices (Effects on ICP, CBF, CMRO2, MAP):
Agent Type Agent ICP CBF CMRO2 MAP Note IV Propofol ↓↓↓ ↓↓↓ ↓↓↓ ↓ Neuroprotective Etomidate ↓ ↓ ↓ ↔ Stable hemodynamics Ketamine ↑/↔ ↑ ↔/↑ ↑ Preserves CPP; caution Volatile (e.g., Sevo) ↔/↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ Low MAC; ICP↑ dose-dependent - ICP Control Agents:
- Mannitol: 0.25-1 g/kg IV.
- Hypertonic Saline (HTS): e.g., 3% (2-5 mL/kg).
⭐ Hyperventilation (PaCO2 30-35 mmHg) for acute ↑ICP is temporizing; prolonged use risks ischemia.
- Acute Intraoperative ↑ICP Management:
Postoperative Care & Complications - TBI Aftermath Alert
- ICU: Maintain CPP >60-70 mmHg; ICP <20-22 mmHg; $PCO_2$ 35-45 mmHg.
- Optimize sedation, analgesia; ensure adequate oxygenation.
- Prophylaxis: DVT, stress ulcers. Seizure prophylaxis (e.g., phenytoin for 7 days if high-risk).
- Monitor for complications:
- Cerebral edema, hematoma re-accumulation.
- Seizures (early/late onset).
- Vasospasm (typically days 4-14).
- Hydrocephalus (communicating/obstructive).
- Infections (VAP, meningitis).
- Electrolyte disturbances (SIADH, DI).

⭐ Tight glycemic control (target glucose <180 mg/dL) and aggressive fever management (maintain normothermia, e.g., temp <37.5°C) are critical to prevent secondary brain injury and improve outcomes after TBI.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Maintain ICP < 20-22 mmHg and CPP 60-70 mmHg.
- Avoid prophylactic hyperventilation (PaCO2 < 30 mmHg); reserve for imminent herniation.
- Use isotonic fluids; avoid hypotonic solutions and dextrose. Maintain euvolemia.
- Prefer IV anesthetics for ICP control. Ketamine generally safe. Avoid N2O.
- Mannitol or hypertonic saline for acute ↑ICP; monitor serum osmolality.
- Prevent hyperthermia; maintain normothermia.
- Seizure prophylaxis (e.g., phenytoin) for severe TBI to prevent early seizures.
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