View clinical trials related to Head Injury Trauma.
Filter by:Elevated intracranial pressure is a dangerous and potentially fatal complication after traumatic brain injury. Hyperventilation is a medical intervention to reduce elevated intracranial pressure by inducing cerebral vasoconstriction, which might be associated to cerebral ischemia and hypoxia. The main hypothesis is that a moderate degree of hyperventilation is sufficient to reduce the intracranial pressure without inducing cerebral ischemia.
Intracranial pressure (ICP) is defined as the pressure inside the skull, and therefore, the pressure inside the brain tissue and the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The relationship between CSF and intracranial blood volumes is described by the Monroe Kellie doctrine; because the brain is incompressible, when the skull is intact, the sum of the volumes of brain, CSF, and intracranial blood is constant.
At the emergencies rooms, patients with head trauma meeting one of the NICE criteria, which include antiplatelet inhibitors treatment, are considered as patients with a risk of cerebral haemorrage and are taken systematically for a CT-scanner. However, there are more and more antiplatelet inhibitor's patient with minor head injury traumas seen at the emergencies room and the efficiency of this NICE criteria is controversial on litterature. This study aims to determine that the absence of no other NICE criteria than antiplatelet inhibitors is a sufficient condition to eliminate a cerebral haemorrhage for patients with head injury traumas, and conversely, that antiplatelet inhibitors treatment would not be by itself an indication for a CT-scanner.