DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY OSMANIA MEDICAL COLLEGE. American Academy of Neurology Guideline Update 2010

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DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY

OSMANIA MEDICAL COLLEGE

American Academy of Neurology Guideline Update 2010

Coma, from the Greek ‘‘deep sleep or

trance,’’ is a state of unresponsiveness in which

the patient lies with eyes closed and cannot be

aroused to respond appropriately to stimuli

even with vigorous stimulation.

• Three medical considerations emphasize the importance of the concept of brain death: (1) Transplant programs require the donation of healthy peripheral organs for success. The early diagnosis of brain death before the

systemic circulation fails allows the salvage of such organs.

However, ethical and legal considerations demand

that if one is to declare the brain dead, the criteria must be clear and unassailable

(2) Even if there were no transplant programs, the ability of modern medicine to keep a body functioning for extended periods often leads to prolonged, expensive, and futile procedures accompanied by great emotional strain on family and medical staff.

(3) Critical care facilities;are limited and expensive and inevitablyplace a drain on other medical resources.

Theirbest use demands that one identify and

selectpatients who are most likely to benefit fromintensive techniques, so that these units are

notoverloaded with individuals who can never

recover cerebral function.

The THREE clinicalfindings necessary to confirm

irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem:

1. coma (with a known cause) 2. absence of brainstem reflexes,

and 3. apnea.

The Clinical Evaluation

The Neurologic Assessment

Ancillary Test

Documentation

A. Establish irreversible and proximate cause of coma.

Exclude the presence of a CNS-depressant drug effect

There should be no recent administration or continued presence of neuromuscular blocking agents

There should be no severe electrolyte, acid-base, or endocrine disturbance

B. Achieve normal core temperature.

Raise the body temperature and maintain a normal or near-normal temperature-36°C

C. Achieve normal systolic blood pressure.

Neurologic examination is usually reliable with a systolic blood pressure 100 mm Hg.

D. Perform 1 neurologic examination

If a certain period of time has passed since the onset of the brain insult to exclude the possibility of recovery, 1 neurologic examination should be sufficient to pronounce brain death.

The Clinical Evaluation

The Neurologic Assessment

A. Coma Patients must lack all evidence of

responsiveness.

Eye opening or eye movement to noxious stimuli is absent.

Noxious stimuli should not produce a motor

response other than spinally mediated reflexes.

B. Absence of Brain Stem Reflex Absence of pupillary response to a bright light is

documented in both eyes.

Absence of ocular movements using oculocephalic testing and oculovestibular reflex testing.

Absence of corneal reflex.

Absence of facial muscle movement to a noxious stimulus.

Absence of the pharyngeal and tracheal reflexes.

C. Apnea Absence of a breathing drive. Breathing drive is tested with CO2 Challenge.

Prerequisites: 1) normotension2) normothermia,3) euvolemia4) eucapnia (PaCO2 35–45 mm Hg)5) absence of hypoxia6) no prior evidence of CO2 retention

Adjust vasopressors to a systolic blood pressure 100 mm Hg.

Preoxygenate for at least 10 minutes with 100% oxygen to a PaO2 200 mm Hg.

Reduce ventilation frequency to 10 breaths per minute to eucapnia.

Reduce positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) to 5 cm H2O

If pulse oximetry oxygen saturation remains 95%, obtain a baseline blood gas

Disconnect the patient from the ventilator.

Preserve oxygenation(e.g., place an insufflation catheter through the endotracheal tube and close to the level of the carina and deliver 100% O2 at 6L/min).

Look closely for respiratory movements for 8–10 minutes.

Abort if systolic blood pressure decreases to 90 mm Hg.

Abort if oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry is 85% for 30 seconds.

If no respiratory drive is observed, repeat blood gas after 8 minutes.

If respiratory movements are absent and arterial PCO2 is 60 mm Hg (or 20 mm Hg increase in arterial PCO2 over a baseline normal arterial PCO2), the apnea test result is POSITIVE.

If the test is inconclusive but the patient is hemodynamically stable during the procedure, it may be repeated for a longer period of time (10–15 minutes) after the patient is again adequately preoxygenated.

The Clinical Evaluation

The Neurologic Assessment

Ancillary Test

In clinical practice, EEG, cerebral angiography, nuclear scan, TCD, CTA, and MRI/MRA are currently used ancillary tests in adults.

Ancillary tests can be used when uncertainty exists about the reliability of parts of the neurologic examination or when the apnea test cannot be performed.

“In adults, ancillary tests are not needed for the clinical diagnosis of brain death and cannot replace a neurologic examination.”

The Clinical Evaluation

The Neurologic Assessment

Ancillary Test

Documentation

Time of death is the time the arterial PCO2 reached the target value (60).

In patients with an aborted apnea test, the time of death is when the ancillary test has been officially interpreted.

Neuronal Injury

Decreased Intracranial Blood Flow

Neuronal Swelling

Increased Intracranial Pressure

ICP>MAP is incompatible with life

Persistent Vegetative State

Locked-in Syndrome

Minimally Responsive State

Normal Sleep-Wake Cycles

No Response to Environmental Stimuli

Diffuse Brain Injury with Preservation of Brain Stem Function

Diffuse or Multi-Focal Brain Injury

Preserved Brain Stem Function

Variable Interaction with Environmental Stimuli

Static Encephalopathy

Ventral Pontine Infarct

Complete Paralysis

Preserved Consciousness

Preserved Eye Movement

Clinical Prerequisites:

Known Irreversible Cause

Exclusion of Potentially Reversible Conditions▪ Drug Intoxication or Poisoning▪ Electrolyte or Acid-Base Imbalance▪ Endocrine Disturbances

Core Body temperature > 32° C

Coma

Absent Brain Stem Reflexes

Apnea

No Response to Noxious Stimuli

▪ Nail Bed Pressure

▪ Sternal Rub

▪ Supra-Orbital Ridge Pressure

Pupillary Reflex

Eye Movements

Facial Sensation and Motor Response

Pharyngeal (Gag) Reflex

Tracheal (Cough) Reflex

Pupils dilated with no constriction to bright light

Occulo-Cephalic Response

“Doll’s Eyes Maneuver”

Oculo-Vestibular Response

“Cold Caloric Testing”

Corneal Reflex

Jaw Reflex Grimace to Supraorbital or Temporo-Mandibular Pressure

Prerequisites

▪ Core Body Temperature > 32° C

▪ Systolic Blood Pressure ≥ 100 mm Hg

▪ Normal Electrolytes

▪ Normal PCO2

1. Pre-Oxygenation▪ 100% Oxygen via Tracheal Cannula ▪ PO2 = 200 mm Hg

2. Monitor PCO2 and PO2 with pulse oximetry3. Disconnect Ventilator4. Observe for Respiratory Movement until

PCO2 = 60 mm Hg5. Discontinue Testing if BP < 90, PO2

saturation decreases, or cardiac dysrhythmia observed

Facial Trauma

Pupillary Abnormalities

CNS Sedatives or Neuromuscular Blockers

Hepatic Failure

Pulmonary Disease

Sweating, Blushing

Deep Tendon Reflexes

Spontaneous Spinal Reflexes- Triple Flexion

Babinski Sign

Recommended when the proximate cause of coma is not known or when confounding clinical conditions limit the clinical examination

EEG

Normal Electrocerebral Silence

Cerebral Angiography

Normal No Intracranial Flow

Technetium-99 Isotope Brain Scan

MR- Angiography

Transcranial Ultrasonography

Somatosensory Evoked Potentials

Somatosensory-evoked potentials. Bilateral absence of N20-P22 response with median nerve stimulation.

THANK YOU

Are there patients who fulfil the clinical criteria of brain death who recover brain function?

There is insufficient evidence to determine the minimally acceptable observation period to ensure that neurologic functions have ceased irreversibly.

What is an adequate observation period to ensure that cessation of neurologic function is permanent?

There is insufficient evidence to determine the minimally acceptable observation period to ensure that neurologic functions have ceased irreversibly.

Are complex motor movements that falsely suggest retained brain function sometimes observed in brain death?

For some patients diagnosed as brain dead, complex, non– brain-mediated spontaneous movements can falsely suggest retained brain function. Additionally, ventilator autocycling may falsely suggest patient-initiated breathing.

What is the comparative safety of techniques for determining apnea?

Apneic oxygenation diffusion to determine apnea is safe, but there is insufficient evidence to determine the comparative safety of techniques used for apnea testing.

Are there new ancillary tests that accurately identify patients with brain death?

Because of a high risk of bias and inadequate statistical precision, there is insufficient evidence to determine if any new ancillary tests accurately identify brain death.

This update sought to use evidence-based methods to answer 5 QUESTIONS historically related to variations in brain death determination4 to PROMOTE UNIFORMITY IN DIAGNOSIS.

1959 Coma de’passe’ Mollaret and Goulon

1968 Irreversible Coma/Brain Death Harvard Medical School Ad Hoc Committee

1981 Uniform Determination of Death Act -

President’s Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine

1995 American Academy of Neurology Guidelines for the determination of Brain Death

2005 NYS Guidelines for Determining Brain Death

“An individual who has sustained eitherirreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions, or irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brainstem. “

Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA)

A determination of death must be made with accepted medical standards

The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) published a 1995 practice parameter to delineate the medical standards for the determination of brain death.

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