Immediate, irreversible, posttraumatic coma: a review indicating that bilateral brainstem injury rather than widespread hemispheric damage is essential for its production.
نویسنده
چکیده
Traumatic brain injury may result in immediate long-lasting coma. Much attention has been given to predicting this outcome from the initial examination because these predictions can guide future treatment and interactions with the patient's family. Reports of diffuse axonal injury in these cases have ascribed the coma to widespread damage in the deep white matter that disconnects the hemispheres from the ascending arousal system (AAS). However, brainstem lesions are also present in such cases, and the AAS may be interrupted at the brainstem level. This review examines autopsy and imaging literature that assesses the presence, extent, and predictive value of lesions in both sites. The evidence suggests that diffuse injury to the deep white matter is not the usual cause of immediate long-lasting posttraumatic coma. Instead, brainstem lesions in the rostral pons or midbrain are almost always the cause but only if the lesions are bilateral. Moreover, recovery is possible if critical brainstem inputs to the AAS are spared. The precise localization of the latter is subject to ongoing investigation with advanced imaging techniques using magnets of very high magnetic gradients. Limited availability of this equipment plus the need to verify the findings continue to require meticulous autopsy examination.
منابع مشابه
Re: Disconnection of the ascending arousal system in traumatic coma. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 2013;72: 505-523.
In the June issue, Edlow et al used a cutting edge imaging tool to demonstrate tracts in the autopsied brain of a victim of traumatic coma (1). Histologic study of the same brain showed widespread axonal damage in keeping with the long-standing understanding that closed head injury results in diffuse axonal injury throughout the brain (2). The imaging analysis showed, however, that only 1 set o...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology
دوره 74 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2015