Archive | 2021

Safety Profile of an Intracranial Multimodal Monitoring Bolt System for Neurocritical Care: A Single-Center Experience

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


\n Background\n\nIntracranial multimodality monitoring (iMMM) is increasingly used in acute brain injured patients; however, safety and reliability remain major concerns to its routine implementation.\nMethods\n\nWe performed a retrospective study including all patients undergoing iMMM at a single European center between July 2016 and January 2020. Brain tissue oxygenation probe (PbtO2), alone or in combination with a microdialysis catheter and/or an 8-contact depth EEG electrode, was inserted using a triple lumen bolt system and targeting normal-appearing at risk brain area on the injured side, whenever possible. Surgical complications, adverse events and technical malfunctions, directly associated with iMMM were collected. A blinded imaging review was performed by an independent radiologist.\nResults\n\n113 patients with 123 iMMM insertions were included for a median monitoring time of 9 [3–14] days. Of those, 93 (76%) patients had only PbtO2 probe insertion and 30 (24%) had also microdialysis and/or iEEG monitoring. SAH was the most frequent indication for iMMM (n\u2009=\u200960, 53%). At least one complication was observed in 67/123 (54%) iMMM placement, corresponding to 58/113 (51%) patients. Misplacement was observed in 16/123 (13%), resulting in a total of 6/16 (38%) malfunctioning PbtO2 catheters. Intracranial hemorrhage was observed in 14 iMMM placements (11%), of which one required surgical drainage. Five placements were complicated by pneumocephalus and 4 with bone fragments, none of these requiring additional surgery. No CNS infection related to iMMM was observed. Seven (6%) probes were accidentally dislodged and 2 probes (2%) were accidentally broken. Ten PbtO2 probes (8%) presented a technical malfunction after a median of 9 [ranges: 2–24] days after initiation of monitoring and 4 of them were replaced.\nConclusions\n\nIn this study, a high occurrence of complications related to iMMM was observed, although most of them did not require specific interventions and did not result in malfunctioning monitoring.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.21203/rs.3.rs-621602/v1
Language English
Journal None

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