Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study

Abstract Background Ambulance drivers in the Netherlands are trained to drive as fluent as possible when transporting a head injured patient to the hospital. Acceleration and deceleration have the potential to create pressure changes in the head that may worsen outcome. Although the idea of fluid sh...

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Main Authors: Iscander M. Maissan, Boris Vlottes, Sanne Hoeks, Jan Bosch, Robert Jan Stolker, Dennis den Hartog
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
Subjects:
EMS
TBI
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-021-00904-3
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spelling doaj-c96ae48171f34362b39f0fd95abc3dc82021-07-04T11:20:13ZengBMCScandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine1757-72412021-06-012911510.1186/s13049-021-00904-3Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle studyIscander M. Maissan0Boris Vlottes1Sanne Hoeks2Jan Bosch3Robert Jan Stolker4Dennis den Hartog5Department of AnesthesiologyDepartment of AnesthesiologyDepartment of AnesthesiologyRegionale Ambulancevoorziening Hollands Midden, Research and DevelopmentDepartment of AnesthesiologyDepartment of Trauma SurgeryAbstract Background Ambulance drivers in the Netherlands are trained to drive as fluent as possible when transporting a head injured patient to the hospital. Acceleration and deceleration have the potential to create pressure changes in the head that may worsen outcome. Although the idea of fluid shift during braking causing intra cranial pressure (ICP) to rise is widely accepted, it lacks any scientific evidence. In this study we evaluated the effects of driving and deceleration during ambulance transportation on the intra cranial pressure in supine position and 30° upright position. Methods Participants were placed on the ambulance gurney in supine position. During driving and braking the optical nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) was measured with ultrasound. Because cerebro spinal fluid percolates in the optical nerve sheath when ICP rises, the diameter of this sheath will distend if ICP rises during braking of the ambulance. The same measurements were taken with the headrest in 30° upright position. Results Mean ONSD in 20 subjects in supine position increased from 4.80 (IQR 4.80–5.00) mm during normal transportation to 6.00 (IQR 5.75–6.40) mm (p < 0.001) during braking. ONSD’s increased in all subjects in supine position. After raising the headrest of the gurney 30° mean ONSD increased from 4.80 (IQR 4.67–5.02) mm during normal transportation to 4.90 (IQR 4.80–5.02) mm (p = 0.022) during braking. In 15 subjects (75%) there was no change in ONSD at all. Conclusions ONSD and thereby ICP increases during deceleration of a transporting vehicle in participants in supine position. Raising the headrest of the gurney to 30 degrees reduces the effect of breaking on ICP.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-021-00904-3AmbulanceTransportationEMSTraumatic brain injuryTBIIntra cranial pressure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iscander M. Maissan
Boris Vlottes
Sanne Hoeks
Jan Bosch
Robert Jan Stolker
Dennis den Hartog
spellingShingle Iscander M. Maissan
Boris Vlottes
Sanne Hoeks
Jan Bosch
Robert Jan Stolker
Dennis den Hartog
Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
Ambulance
Transportation
EMS
Traumatic brain injury
TBI
Intra cranial pressure
author_facet Iscander M. Maissan
Boris Vlottes
Sanne Hoeks
Jan Bosch
Robert Jan Stolker
Dennis den Hartog
author_sort Iscander M. Maissan
title Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
title_short Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
title_full Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
title_fullStr Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
title_full_unstemmed Ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
title_sort ambulance deceleration causes increased intra cranial pressure in supine position: a prospective observational prove of principle study
publisher BMC
series Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
issn 1757-7241
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background Ambulance drivers in the Netherlands are trained to drive as fluent as possible when transporting a head injured patient to the hospital. Acceleration and deceleration have the potential to create pressure changes in the head that may worsen outcome. Although the idea of fluid shift during braking causing intra cranial pressure (ICP) to rise is widely accepted, it lacks any scientific evidence. In this study we evaluated the effects of driving and deceleration during ambulance transportation on the intra cranial pressure in supine position and 30° upright position. Methods Participants were placed on the ambulance gurney in supine position. During driving and braking the optical nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) was measured with ultrasound. Because cerebro spinal fluid percolates in the optical nerve sheath when ICP rises, the diameter of this sheath will distend if ICP rises during braking of the ambulance. The same measurements were taken with the headrest in 30° upright position. Results Mean ONSD in 20 subjects in supine position increased from 4.80 (IQR 4.80–5.00) mm during normal transportation to 6.00 (IQR 5.75–6.40) mm (p < 0.001) during braking. ONSD’s increased in all subjects in supine position. After raising the headrest of the gurney 30° mean ONSD increased from 4.80 (IQR 4.67–5.02) mm during normal transportation to 4.90 (IQR 4.80–5.02) mm (p = 0.022) during braking. In 15 subjects (75%) there was no change in ONSD at all. Conclusions ONSD and thereby ICP increases during deceleration of a transporting vehicle in participants in supine position. Raising the headrest of the gurney to 30 degrees reduces the effect of breaking on ICP.
topic Ambulance
Transportation
EMS
Traumatic brain injury
TBI
Intra cranial pressure
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-021-00904-3
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