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Early abolition of cough reflex predicts mortality in deeply sedated brain-injured patients
Author(s) -
Stanislas Kandelman,
J. Allary,
Raphaël Porcher,
Cássia Righy,
Clarissa Francisca Valdez,
Frank Rasulo,
Nicholas Heming,
Guy Moneger,
Éric Azabou,
Guillaume Savary,
Djillali Annane,
Fabrice Chrétien,
Nicola Latronico,
Fernando A. Bozza,
Benjamin Rohaut,
Tarek Sharshar
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.10326
Subject(s) - medicine , sedation , anesthesia , glasgow coma scale , pupillary light reflex , neurointensive care , cough reflex , subarachnoid hemorrhage , intensive care unit , intraventricular hemorrhage , intensive care , reflex , prospective cohort study , pupil , surgery , intensive care medicine , pregnancy , genetics , neuroscience , biology , gestational age
Background Deep sedation may hamper the detection of neurological deterioration in brain-injured patients. Impaired brainstem reflexes within the first 24 h of deep sedation are associated with increased mortality in non-brain-injured patients. Our objective was to confirm this association in brain-injured patients. Methods This was an observational prospective multicenter cohort study involving four neuro-intensive care units. We included acute brain-injured patients requiring deep sedation, defined by a Richmond Assessment Sedation Scale (RASS) < −3. Neurological assessment was performed at day 1 and included pupillary diameter, pupillary light, corneal and cough reflexes, and grimace and motor response to noxious stimuli. Pre-sedation Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) and Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS-II) were collected, as well as the cause of death in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Results A total of 137 brain-injured patients were recruited, including 70 (51%) traumatic brain-injured patients, 40 (29%) vascular (subarachnoid hemorrhage or intracerebral hemorrhage). Thirty patients (22%) died in the ICU. At day 1, the corneal (OR 2.69, p = 0.034) and cough reflexes (OR 5.12, p = 0.0003) were more frequently abolished in patients that died in the ICU. In a multivariate analysis, abolished cough reflex was associated with ICU mortality after adjustment to pre-sedation GCS, SAPS-II, RASS (OR: 5.19, 95% CI [1.92–14.1], p = 0.001) or dose of sedatives (OR: 8.89, 95% CI [2.64–30.0], p = 0.0004). Conclusion Early (day 1) cough reflex abolition is an independent predictor of mortality in deeply sedated brain-injured patients. Abolished cough reflex likely reflects a brainstem dysfunction that might result from the combination of primary and secondary neuro-inflammatory cerebral insults revealed and/or worsened by sedation.

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