Index
Module 10 • Neurology
Neurocritical Care
70%
Data Tables
Neurocritical Care
Keaton S. Smetana ~3 min read Module 10 of 20
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Neurocritical Care

2Low-molecular-weight heparins are the drugs of choice for prophylaxis and should be initiated within

36 hours post-injury.

3

Duration of prophylaxis is typically about 8 weeks.

H.Role of High-Dose Methylprednisolone (Neurosurgery 2013;60(suppl 1)82-91; J Neurosurg 1998;89:699-
706; JAMA 1997;277:1597-604; J Neurosurg 1992;76:23-31; N Engl J Med 1990;322:1405-11)
1

Controversial topic related to NASCIS-II and NASCIS-III trials

2Methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg intravenously Γ— 1, followed by 5.4 mg/kg/hour within 8 hours of injury

for 24 or 48 hours

3

Both trials suggested a modest benefit in the first 6 weeks or 6 months (which often did not persist at 1

year) and a modest risk (primarily related to infection). Current guidelines do not support administering

high-dose methylprednisolone.

4

NASCIS-II split enrolled population in half (those who received the drug before the median time to

administration [8 hours] and those who did not).

Subgroup analysis may not have been powered to show benefit.

Reported motor and sensory scores from one side of the body, not both. The investigators later said

there was no difference but have not allowed others to examine the raw data.

5

Consistently showed risk (GI bleeding, infection) and inconsistently showed benefit

6

Potential treatment effects may have been caused by early surgery or additional benefit of high-dose

methylprednisolone therapy in combination with early surgery.

7

NASCIS-III used a functional independence measure (FIM) score to show how improvement in muscle

strength might translate to improved outcomes. Failed to show a difference in FIM score

8

If a practitioner does choose to use high-dose steroids in SCI:

Must use methylprednisolone; no other steroids

Must use NASCIS-II or NASCIS-III dosing

Must give within 8 hours of injury

XII.BRAIN TUMORS
A.Epidemiology
1

According to the National Brain Tumor Society, an estimated 94,000 Americans received a new primary

brain tumor diagnosis in 2023. Primary brain tumors (from brain cells such as meninges and neural

tissues)

Glioblastoma

Meningioma

Pituitary adenoma

d.Astrocytoma
2Brain metastases – Common neoplasms that result in spread to brain

Lung (40%–50%)

Breast (15%–20%)

Melanoma (5%–10%)

d.Colon (4%–6%)

Renal cell carcinoma

CNS lymphoma

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