Dip. Diab.DCA, Dip. Software statistics- Phd

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Brain Death Mouhamad Ghyath Jamil, MD, FCCP
Advertisements

Brainstem death Paulus Anam Ong Department of Neurology.
Lecture 8 Dr. Zahoor Ali Shaikh 1. Alveolar Ventilation increases 20-fold during heavy exercise to keep pace with increased demand of O 2 uptake and CO.
Determination of Brain Death Donn Dexter, MD, FAAN Douglas T. Miller Symposium April 29, 2011.
Brain Death Anatomy and Physiology
Lecture 8 Dr. Zahoor Ali Shaikh 1. Alveolar Ventilation increases 20-fold during heavy exercise to keep pace with increased demand of O 2 uptake and CO.
Vital Signs Chapter 15. Vital Signs Various factors that provide information about the basic body conditions of the patient 4 Main Vital Signs 1.Temperature.
Brain Death Jana Stockwell, MD.
Brain Death Nancy G. Hoover, MD. Background President’s Commission report  First formalized criteria for determination of brain death  Criteria.
Organ Donation End of Life care in the Operating Room Matthew Bock Surgical recovery coordinator University of Wisconsin Organ Procurement Organization.
Brain Death Dr Gita Nath Consultant Anaesthetist
BRAIN DEATH Pediatric Critical Care Medicine Emory University Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY OSMANIA MEDICAL COLLEGE. American Academy of Neurology Guideline Update 2010.
Glasgow coma scale Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab.DCA, Dip. Software statistics PhD (physio) Mahatma gandhi medical college and.
New Protocols for 2006 Protocols: Provide consistent predictable care for 90% of patients Development of protocols is a dynamic and ongoing process.
Medical Aspects of Death. Death Cessation of life Is it event or process When does death actually occur? “Cellular Death” “Somatic Death”
Carbonic Acid-Bicarbonate Buffering System CO 2 + H 2 O  H 2 CO 3  H + + HCO 3 – Respiratory regulation Respiratory regulation Renal regulation Renal.
Human Systems: Nervous System & Sense Organs
Brain Death and Organ Donation
Patient Vital Signs DRAFT
Department of Computer Science Stony Brook University
Chapter 28: Human Systems and Homeostasis
الجامعة السورية الخاصة كلية الطب البشري قسم الجراحة Principle of Transplantation M.A.Kubtan, MD - FRCS M.A.Kubtan1.
Courtney Bartel, Vishruth Reddy
Intracranial Pressure (ICP) Megan McClintock, MS, RN Megan McClintock, MS, RN11/4/11.
Brain Death in The ICU Dr. Jonathan Goodall M62 Coloproctology Course March 22 nd 2007.
Trigeminal (Gasserian) Ganglion Block
Unit 4: Medical Technologies. - any format of machinery that is used to operate or perform medical procedures.
PhD MD MBBS Faculty of Medicine Al Maarefa Colleges of Science & Technology Faculty of Medicine Al Maarefa Colleges of Science & Technology Lecture – 7:
HEART DISEASE SBI 3C: DECEMBER HEART ATTACK:  Blood flow to a section of the heart is blocked  If oxygen cannot get through the muscle starts.
The Determination of Brain Death James Zisfein, M.D. Chief, Division of Neurology Lincoln Hospital, Bronx, NY.
Organ donation is the process of removing tissues or organs from a live, or recently dead, person to be used in another. The former is the donor and the.
 ACS Committee on Trauma Presents Injuries Due to Burns and Cold Injuries Due to Burns and Cold.
EFFECT OF EXERCISE & OTHER FACTORS ON RESPIRATION Lecture 8 Dr. Zahoor Ali Shaikh 1.
Coma and Brain Death. Objectives O Define Coma and altered consciousness O Understand the brain death exam.
Idara C. E. The persistent Vegetative State; Determination of death and Brain Death.
THE SYSTEMS OF THE HUMAN BODY
The eleven organ systems of the human body work together to maintain homeostasis Homeostasis is the internal balance of the body Within the body are levels.
Signs we are ALIVE Vital Signs.
KY ORGAN DONOR AFFILIATES. Organ donation may occur in brain death situations, allowing a person to donate kidneys, lungs, heart, liver, pancreas and.
Shock It is a sudden drop in BP leading to decrease
Brain Death د/ عبد المنعم جودة مدبولى
ANAESTHESIA Professor / AMIR SALAH. GENERAL – REGIONAL – LOCAL ANAESTHESIA.
Is the failure of pulmonary gas exchange to maintain the normal arterial O2 and CO2 level. It is divided in to type I and II in relation to the presence.
Definition of death Malta – No legal definition
Chapter 24 Vital Signs.
SHOCK. SHOCK Shock is a critical condition that results from inadequate tissue delivery of O2 and nutrients to meet tissue metabolic demand. Shock does.
Presented By Dr/ Said Said Elshama
 Need for communication  Communication is required for coordination  Gather information  Process information  Respond accordingly.
Organ / Tissue / Eye Donation Overview Essential Information for Health Care Professionals.
Medical Aspects of Death
FIRST AID AND EMERGENCY CARE LECTURE 4 Vital Signs.
Joint Special Operations Medical Training Center Manage a Patient Under General Parenteral Anesthesia INSTRUCTOR SFC HILL.
Jennifer L. Doherty, MS, LAT, ATC Management of Medical Emergencies
Online Module: Brain Death
INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE
Brain Death ISCCM FOUNDATION DAY.
Declaring Brain Death in Infants and Children
Making a diagnosis of death
Claire Burbridge Specialist Nurse Organ Donation
بسم الله الرحمن الرحیم.
University of Wisconsin Organ Procurement Organization
Determination of Brain Death
BRAIN DEATH IN NEONATES
Shock It is a sudden drop in BP leading to decrease
Ethics in terminally ill patient II
BRAIN DEATH Assoc. Prof. Dr. SEVGİ BİLGEN
Recent advances – TRALI
Increased Intracranial Pressure
Circulation and haemorrhage control
Presentation transcript:

Dip. Diab.DCA, Dip. Software statistics- Phd Brain death Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab.DCA, Dip. Software statistics- Phd Mahatma Gandhi Medical college and research institute , puducherry , India

History In 1902, Cushing first reported cessation of cerebral circulation when intracranial pressure exceeded arterial blood pressure in monkeys In 1959, Bertrand and colleagues reported the maintenance of respiration by mechanical means for 3 days after death of a patient with otitis media who underwent circulatory collapse

History first heart implantation by Barnard in 1967 ------------------------------------------------------- Irreversible loss of consciousness 1976 Death is defined as the irreversible loss of the capacity for consciousness, combined with the irreversible loss of the capacity to breathe.”

Clinical Diagnosis of Brain Death

Diagnostic Criteria for the Clinical Diagnosis of Brain Death Prerequisites absence of clinical brain function when the proximate cause is known and demonstrably irreversible.    1.    Clinical or neuroimaging evidence of an acute central nervous system catastrophe    2.    Exclusion of complicating medical conditions that may confound clinical assessment (no severe electrolyte, acid-base, or endocrine disturbance)    3.    No drug intoxication or poisoning    4.    Core temperature ≥ 32°C (90°F)

Brain death The three cardinal findings in brain death are coma or unresponsiveness, absence of brainstem reflexes, apnea.

Brain is all omnipotent Can we test all ?? Immune . Endocrine etc

The first one Coma or unresponsiveness—no cerebral motor response to pain in all extremities (nail-bed pressure and supraorbital pressure) NO Drug intoxication, severe electrolyte, acid-base, or endocrine disturbance,

Brain stem reflexes Pupils 4 – 9 mm No response to bright light

Ocular movement   1. No oculo cephalic reflex (testing only when no fracture or instability of the cervical spine is apparent)    ii.  No deviation of eyes to irrigation in each ear with 50 mL of cold water (allow 1 minute after injection and at least 5 minutes between testing on each side)

oculocephalic reflex  reflex eye movement that stabilizes images on the retina during head movement by producing an eye movement in the direction opposite to head movement, thus preserving the image on the center of the visual field.

COWS Ice cold or warm water or air is irrigated into the external auditory canal, usually using a syringe. The temperature difference between the body and the injected water creates a convective current in the endolymph . Hot and cold water produce currents in opposite directions and therefore a horizontal nystagmus in opposite directions in patients with an intact brainstem:

Facial response I . No corneal reflex to touch with a throat swab   ii.  No jaw reflex    iii.  No grimacing to deep pressure on nail bed, supraorbital ridge, or temporo mandibular joint

Pharyngeal and tracheal reflexes i.     No response after stimulation of the posterior pharynx with tongue blade    ii.  No cough response to bronchial suctioning Vagus Failure of the heart rate to increase by more than 5 beats per minute after 1- 2 mg. of atropine intravenously. This indicates absent function of the vagus nerve and nuclei.

Clinical testing Apnea testing

Apnea testing Prerequisites i. Core temperature ≥ 36.5°C or 97°F   ii.  Systolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mm Hg    iii.  Euvolemia. - +ve fluid balance iv.  Normal Paco2. Option: Paco2≥ 40 mm Hg    v. Normal Pao2. Option: preoxygenation to obtain arterial Pao2≥ 200 mm Hg

Apnea testing Connect a pulse oximeter disconnect ventilator.  Deliver 100% O2, 6 L/min, into the trachea Observe for respiratory movements 8 minutes Respiratory attempts + means test negative Motor responses (i.e., the Lazarus sign) may occur spontaneously during apnea testing- spinal origin

Apnea testing Measure arterial Pao2, Pco2, and pH after approximately 8 minutes     If respiratory movements are absent and arterial Pco2 is ≥ 60 mm Hg (option: 20 mm Hg increase in Pco2 over a baseline normal Pco2), the apnea test result is positive (i.e., it supports the diagnosis of brain death).

Problem in between ???? BP < 90 Desaturation Arrhythmias Reconnect & ABG PaCO2 > 60 or increase more than 20 from normal baseline + but in between results – indeterminate

After brain death Patients become poikilothermic Hypothermic No fever External heat ?? Use 2 – 24 hours hormones continue to secrete Immune system Increased immune mediators, cytokines ? Organ transplantation success rates

The path Brain injury Progress of ischemia Sudden hypotension ( vagal ) Brainstem death Unopposed sympathetic (storm) Can damage myocardium

Young RTA patient with brain death

Cerebral Death: Persistent Vegetative State Stop of the functions of the cerebral cortices. Brainstem functions governing the respiratory centers, autonomic nervous system, endocrine system, and immune system, which are vital for maintaining life, are preserved May go for months to years That is death ?? Controversial

Brain dead = dead !! Central Integrator Theory of the Brain In brain death, the body is no more an integrated organism but a mere and rapidly disintegrating collection of organs that have lost forever the capacity of working as a coordinated whole

Infant organs Anencephalics Organ donors Gernamy OKAYs but still concern about Dead donor rule Radionucide blood flow and 2 EEG – children

Brain dead mother But fetus Preserve for weeks Tocolytics Ethical , moral and legal issues to be sorted out

Variability in Policies and Practices for Determining Brain Death Law Guideline Apnea test Number of physicians Observation time Confirmatory tests India !!

Confirmatory tests Cerebral Angiography Electroencephalography Transcranial Doppler Ultrasonography Cerebral Scintigraphy (99mTc-hexametazime) Evoked Responses Positron Emission Tomography

Harvard medical school definition Brain death unresponsiveness and lack of receptivity, the absence of movement and breathing, the absence of brain-stem reflexes, and coma whose cause has been identified. Withdraw cardio-respiratory support in accordance with hospital policies, including those for organ donation

Organ donation -- anaesthetic concerns Among the brain dead 4 % of deaths are fit to donate Out of which 10 % come to our picture

Donor A potential donor is any previously healthy individual who has suffered an irreversible catastrophic brain injury of known aetiology. Exclusion criteria old age (greater than 65-70 yr), untreated systemic sepsis, most extra cranial malignancies, and the presence of transmissible diseases not amenable to antibiotic therapy

What organs?? Donor organs may be divided into perfusible organs (kidneys, liver, heart, lung(s), pancreas, and bowel) Non perfusable organs and tissues (eyes, skin, bone, heart valves, and dura). Maintain perfusion

Rule of 100 Systolic blood pressure > 100 mmHg Urine output > 100 ml. hr PaO2 > 100 mmHg Haemoglobin > 100 g. Blood sugar around 100 mg%

Anaesthetic problems

Other goals CVP 6- 10 mmHg pH – 7.35 to 7.45 Na – 130 – 140 K+ -- , calcium, magnesium kept normal Temperature - > 35.5 – controversial PaCo2 – normal Methylprednisolone 15 mg/kg T3 ( thyroxine)

Anaesthetic concerns spinal cords are intact and somatic and visceral reflexes remain, Muscle relaxants are necessary to suppress motor activity mediated by spinal reflexes. Vasodilators usually are employed to suppress hypertension and tachycardia by noxious stimuli. Sedation and analgesia ? !!

Summary 1. Establishing the cause of disease 2.    Excluding certain potentially reversible syndromes that may produce signs similar to brain death    3.    Demonstrating clinical signs of brain death: coma, brainstem areflexia, and apnea Anaesthetic concerns

Thank you