Maintaining Osmotic Therapy in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury Using Non-Invasive Ultrasound Tool

Autores/as

  • Ahmed Ibrahim Ragab*; Mohamed Ibrahim Abdelgawad ; Fatma Mohamed Khamis; Amr Mohamed Helmy; Ghada Abdelaziz Kamhawy Autor/a

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48047/dpfn0971

Palabras clave:

Intracranial pressure; Ultrasound; Mannitol; Serum sodium; Osmolality

Resumen

Trauma of the head is the leading cause of death. Monitoring of intracranial pressure (ICP) by non-invasive methods is practiced with the use of bedside ocular ultrasound. Objective: to assess the usage of the bedside ultrasound optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) as a guiding tool for elevated ICP to limit using mannitol to patients currently having elevated ICP

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Referencias

- Robba, C., Bacigaluppi, S., Cardim, D., Donnelly, J., Bertuccio, A. and Czosnyka, M., 2016. Non-invasive assessment of intracranial pressure. Acta Neurologica Scandinavica, 134(1), pp.421.

- Gupta, P., Mahajan, V. and Gupta, A., 2019. Correlation of Ultrasonographic Optic Nerve Sheath Diameter with Direct Measurement of Intracranial Pressure. International Journal, 2(5), p.292.

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Publicado

2024-12-12

Cómo citar

Maintaining Osmotic Therapy in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury Using Non-Invasive Ultrasound Tool (Ahmed Ibrahim Ragab*; Mohamed Ibrahim Abdelgawad ; Fatma Mohamed Khamis; Amr Mohamed Helmy; Ghada Abdelaziz Kamhawy , Trans.). (2024). Cuestiones De Fisioterapia, 53(03), 5211-5219. https://doi.org/10.48047/dpfn0971