These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Observational case series: six neurosurgical patients with septic shock demonstrating clinical improvement after a combination of standard care and blood purification.
    Author: Burov AI, Abramov TA, Kostritca NS, Korotkov DS, Danilov GV, Strunina YV, Savin IA.
    Journal: Eur J Med Res; 2021 Dec 20; 26(1):151. PubMed ID: 34930484.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: For patients with primary brain injury, septic shock is especially dangerous due to the possibility of secondary cerebral damage. The key factor of sepsis-associated brain injury is inflammatory mediators, pathogen and damage-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs, DAMPs) release. Theoretically, blood purification may be beneficial for patients with primary brain injury due to its possibility for fast removal of inflammatory mediators. CASE PRESENTATION: We report on six post-neurosurgery septic shock patients treated with combined blood purification (CBP), which included CRRT with high adsorption capacity membrane in combination with CytoSorb adsorber. Clinical improvement in the course of CBP was registered in all patients. Three patients had a stable clinical improvement; the other three patients had only a transient improvement due to underlying neurological and cardiac deficits aggravation. We observed septic shock reversal in four patients. The key observations of the case series are a significant decrease in MOF severity (measured by SOFA score) and in catecholamine need (not statistically significant). By the end of CBP we observed a significant decrease in blood lactate, PCT and IL-6 levels. Two patients demonstrated level of consciousness increase in the setting of CBP therapy measured by GCS and FOUR score. CONCLUSION: This case series demonstrates that CBP therapy may have a role for septic shock patients with primary brain injury.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]