Determining BRAIN DEATH in Adult
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Transcript Determining BRAIN DEATH in Adult
DEPARTMENT OF NEUROLOGY
OSMANIA MEDICAL COLLEGE
American Academy of Neurology
Guideline Update 2010
Coma, from the Greek ‘‘deep sleep or
trance,’’ is a state of unresponsiveness in which
the patient lies with eyes closed and cannot be
aroused to respond appropriately to stimuli
even with vigorous stimulation.
• Three medical considerations emphasize the
importance of the concept of brain death:
(1) Transplant programs require the donation of
healthy peripheral organs for success.
The early diagnosis of brain death before the
systemic circulation fails allows the salvage of
such organs.
However, ethical and legal considerations demand
that if one is to declare the brain dead, the criteria
must be clear and unassailable
(2) Even if there were no transplant programs,
the ability of modern medicine to keep a
body functioning for extended periods often
leads to prolonged, expensive, and futile
procedures accompanied by great emotional
strain on family and medical staff.
(3) Critical care facilities;
are limited and expensive and inevitably
place a drain on other medical resources. Their
best use demands that one identify and select
patients who are most likely to benefit from
intensive techniques, so that these units are not
overloaded with individuals who can never
recover cerebral function.
The THREE clinical
findings necessary to confirm irreversible
cessation of all functions of the entire brain,
including the brain stem:
1. coma (with a known cause)
2. absence of brainstem reflexes, and
3. apnea.
The Clinical Evaluation
The Neurologic Assessment
Ancillary Test
Documentation
A. Establish irreversible and proximate cause of
coma.
Exclude the presence of a CNS-depressant drug effect
There should be no recent administration or continued
presence of neuromuscular blocking agents
There should be no severe electrolyte, acid-base, or
endocrine disturbance
B. Achieve normal core temperature.
Raise the body temperature and maintain a normal or nearnormal temperature-36°C
C. Achieve normal systolic blood pressure.
Neurologic examination is usually reliable with a systolic
blood pressure 100 mm Hg.
D. Perform 1 neurologic examination
If a certain period of time has passed since the onset of the
brain insult to exclude the possibility of recovery, 1
neurologic examination should be sufficient to pronounce
brain death.
The Clinical Evaluation
The Neurologic Assessment
A. Coma
Patients must lack all evidence of responsiveness.
Eye opening or eye movement to noxious stimuli is absent.
Noxious stimuli should not produce a motor response other
than spinally mediated reflexes.
B. Absence of Brain Stem Reflex
Absence of pupillary response to a bright light is
documented in both eyes.
Absence of ocular movements using oculocephalic testing
and oculovestibular reflex testing.
Absence of corneal reflex.
Absence of facial muscle movement to a noxious stimulus.
Absence of the pharyngeal and tracheal reflexes.
C. Apnea
Absence of a breathing drive.
Breathing drive is tested with CO2 Challenge.
Prerequisites:
1) normotension
2) normothermia,
3) euvolemia
4) eucapnia (PaCO2 35–45 mm Hg)
5) absence of hypoxia
6) no prior evidence of CO2 retention
Adjust vasopressors to a systolic blood pressure 100 mm Hg.
Preoxygenate for at least 10 minutes with 100% oxygen to a
PaO2 200 mm Hg.
Reduce ventilation frequency to 10 breaths per minute to
eucapnia.
Reduce positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) to 5 cm H2O
If pulse oximetry oxygen saturation remains 95%, obtain a
baseline blood gas
Disconnect the patient from the ventilator.
Preserve oxygenation(e.g., place an insufflation catheter
through the endotracheal tube and close to the level of the
carina and deliver 100% O2 at 6L/min).
Look closely for respiratory movements for 8–10 minutes.
Abort if systolic blood pressure decreases to 90 mm Hg.
Abort if oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry is
85% for 30 seconds.
If no respiratory drive is observed, repeat blood gas after 8
minutes.
If respiratory movements are absent and arterial PCO2 is 60
mm Hg (or 20 mm Hg increase in arterial PCO2 over a
baseline normal arterial PCO2), the apnea test result is
POSITIVE.
If the test is inconclusive but the patient is hemodynamically
stable during the procedure, it may be repeated for a longer
period of time (10–15 minutes) after the patient is again
adequately preoxygenated.
The Clinical Evaluation
The Neurologic Assessment
Ancillary Test
In clinical practice, EEG, cerebral
angiography, nuclear scan, TCD, CTA, and
MRI/MRA are currently used ancillary tests in
adults.
Ancillary tests can be used when uncertainty
exists about the reliability of parts of the
neurologic examination or when the apnea
test cannot be performed.
“In adults, ancillary tests are
not needed for the clinical
diagnosis of brain death
and cannot replace a
neurologic examination.”
The Clinical Evaluation
The Neurologic Assessment
Ancillary Test
Documentation
Time of death is the time the arterial PCO2
reached the target value (60).
In patients with an aborted apnea test, the
time of death is when the ancillary test has
been officially interpreted.
Neuronal Swelling
Neuronal Injury
ICP>MAP is
incompatible
with life
Decreased Intracranial
Blood Flow
Increased Intracranial
Pressure
Persistent Vegetative State
Locked-in Syndrome
Minimally Responsive State
Normal Sleep-Wake Cycles
No Response to Environmental Stimuli
Diffuse Brain Injury with Preservation of
Brain Stem Function
Static Encephalopathy
Diffuse or Multi-Focal Brain Injury
Preserved Brain Stem Function
Variable Interaction with Environmental
Stimuli
Ventral Pontine Infarct
Complete Paralysis
Preserved Consciousness
Preserved Eye Movement
Clinical Prerequisites:
Known Irreversible Cause
Exclusion of Potentially Reversible Conditions
▪ Drug Intoxication or Poisoning
▪ Electrolyte or Acid-Base Imbalance
▪ Endocrine Disturbances
Core Body temperature > 32° C
Coma
Absent Brain Stem Reflexes
Apnea
No Response to Noxious Stimuli
▪ Nail Bed Pressure
▪ Sternal Rub
▪ Supra-Orbital Ridge Pressure
Pupillary Reflex
Eye Movements
Facial Sensation and Motor Response
Pharyngeal (Gag) Reflex
Tracheal (Cough) Reflex
Pupils dilated with no constriction to bright light
Occulo-Cephalic Response
“Doll’s Eyes Maneuver”
Oculo-Vestibular Response
“Cold Caloric Testing”
Corneal Reflex
Jaw Reflex
Grimace to Supraorbital or
Temporo-Mandibular Pressure
Prerequisites
▪ Core Body Temperature > 32° C
▪ Systolic Blood Pressure ≥ 100 mm Hg
▪ Normal Electrolytes
▪ Normal PCO2
1. Pre-Oxygenation
▪ 100% Oxygen via Tracheal Cannula
▪ PO2 = 200 mm Hg
2. Monitor PCO2 and PO2 with pulse oximetry
3. Disconnect Ventilator
4. Observe for Respiratory Movement until PCO2 = 60
mm Hg
5. Discontinue Testing if BP < 90, PO2 saturation
decreases, or cardiac dysrhythmia observed
Facial Trauma
Pupillary Abnormalities
CNS Sedatives or Neuromuscular Blockers
Hepatic Failure
Pulmonary Disease
Sweating, Blushing
Deep Tendon Reflexes
Spontaneous Spinal Reflexes- Triple Flexion
Babinski Sign
Recommended when the proximate
cause of coma is not known or when
confounding clinical conditions limit the
clinical examination
EE
G
Normal
Electrocerebral Silence
Cerebral Angiography
Normal
No Intracranial Flow
Technetium-99 Isotope Brain Scan
MR- Angiography
Transcranial
Ultrasonography
Somatosensory Evoked Potentials
Somatosensory-evoked potentials. Bilateral
absence of N20-P22 response with median
nerve stimulation.
THANK YOU
Are there patients who fulfil the clinical
criteria of brain death who recover brain
function?
There is insufficient evidence to determine the minimally
acceptable observation period to ensure that neurologic
functions have ceased irreversibly.
What is an adequate observation period to
ensure that cessation of neurologic
function is permanent?
There is insufficient evidence to determine the minimally
acceptable observation period to ensure that neurologic
functions have ceased irreversibly.
Are complex motor movements that falsely
suggest retained brain function sometimes
observed in brain death?
For some patients diagnosed as brain dead, complex, non–
brain-mediated spontaneous movements can falsely suggest
retained brain function. Additionally, ventilator autocycling
may falsely suggest patient-initiated breathing.
What is the comparative safety of techniques
for determining apnea?
Apneic oxygenation diffusion to determine apnea is safe, but
there is insufficient evidence to determine the comparative
safety of techniques used for apnea testing.
Are there new ancillary tests that accurately
identify patients with brain death?
Because of a high risk of bias and inadequate statistical
precision, there is insufficient evidence to determine if any
new ancillary tests accurately identify brain death.
This update sought to use
evidence-based methods
to answer 5 QUESTIONS
historically related to
variations in brain death
determination4 to
PROMOTE UNIFORMITY
IN DIAGNOSIS.
1959 Coma de’passe’ Mollaret and Goulon
1968 Irreversible Coma/Brain Death Harvard Medical School
Ad Hoc Committee
1981 Uniform Determination of Death Act - President’s
Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine
1995 American Academy of Neurology Guidelines for the
determination of Brain Death
2005 NYS Guidelines for Determining Brain Death
“An individual who has sustained either
irreversible cessation of circulatory and
respiratory functions, or irreversible
cessation of all functions of the entire brain,
including the brainstem. “
Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA)
A determination of death must be
made with accepted medical
standards
The American Academy of Neurology
(AAN) published a 1995 practice
parameter to delineate the medical
standards for the determination of
brain death.