Introduction: Common causes of non-traumatic acute cerebral edema include malignant hypertension, hyponatremia, anoxia, and cerebral vascular accident. The computed tomographic images and data obtained during care of the patient described in this case report provide evidence that hypercarbia can cause increased intracranial pressure and coma without permanent brain injury. Partial pressure of carbon dioxide evaluation for coma is essential to provide faster diagnosis and therapeutic correction in certain common critical disease states. We present the case of a patient in a coma associated with cerebral edema during a typical asthma exacerbation with hypercapnic respiratory failure.
Case Presentation: An obese 63-year-old African American woman with asthma presented to our hospital with facial swelling and shortness of breath. Immediately following intubation for hypercapnic respiratory failure, she was noted to have a dilated, unresponsive right pupil. An emergent computed tomographic head scan revealed that she had increased intracranial pressure. A neurosurgeon agreed with the computed tomography interpretation and recommended no surgical intervention. The patient's respiratory acidosis was corrected with ventilatory management over several hours in the intensive care unit. Nine and one-half hours later a follow-up head computed tomographic scan was read as normal without cerebral edema. At 12 hours, the patient's right pupil was 5 mm in diameter and reactive. By 24 hours, her pupils were symmetrically equal and reactive. Her symptoms had improved, and she was extubated. A brain magnetic resonance imaging scan revealed no abnormalities.
Conclusion: Alteration of consciousness related to hypercapnia during respiratory failure is not generally thought to be related to cerebral edema. Respiratory acidosis resulting from hypercarbia is known to produce carbon dioxide narcosis and coma, but no current treatment algorithm suggests that rapid hypercapnia correction can be critical to neurologic outcome. To the best of our knowledge, our case is a unique example of the physiological changes that may occur in relation to arterial carbon dioxide concentration in the normal brain in the setting of typical hypercapnic respiratory failure. Correction of respiratory acidosis reversed the neurologic symptoms and physiology causing cerebral edema and coma in our patient. Rare similar cases have been sporadically reported in the medical literature, typically in children. Our case is also unusual in that rapid deterioration and clinical status were directly observed on simultaneous computed tomographic scans. Had this patient been found unresponsive, or had she had brief respiratory or cardiac arrest, the scan could have been interpreted as global anoxic injury leading to a different therapeutic course.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-5-192 | DOI Listing |
Ann Med
December 2025
Department of Neurology, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
Background: We systematically reviewed neuroimaging predictors for malignant brain oedema (MBE) after thrombectomy in patients with ischemic stroke.
Methods: We searched MEDLINE and EMBASE in November 2023 for studies of patients with ischemic stroke. We included studies investigating neuroimaging predictors or prediction models for MBE after thrombectomy.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol
January 2025
From the Department of Medical Imaging (X.Q.C.,C.S.Z.,Q.H.L.,H.M.P.,J.J.T.,B.Y.L.,G.M.L.),and neurology(W.S.Z.,A.Y.L.) Nanjing Jinling Hospital, Nanjing University School of Medicine, Nanjing,Jiangsu,China; Department of radiology (B.T., X.T.,Y.X.H.,L.G.C.,C.W.S.), Changhai Hospital of Shanghai, The first affiliated hospital of Navy Medical University, Shanghai, China; Department of Medical Imaging (L.J.H.), Nanjing Jinling Hospital, the First School of Clinical Medicine, Southern Medical University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China; Department of Medical Imaging (X.S.), Nanjing Jinling Hospital, Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China;Department of radiology (Q.C.,X.D.Y.,), Nanjing First Hospital, Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China.
Background And Purpose: Early identification of malignant cerebral edema (MCE) in patients with acute ischemic stroke is crucial for timely interventions. We aimed to identify regions critically associated with MCE using the Alberta Stroke Program Early Computed Tomography Score (ASPECTS) to evaluate the association between location-specific-net water uptake (NWU) and MCE.
Materials And Methods: This multicentre, retrospective cohort study included patients with acute ischemic stroke following large anterior circulation occlusion.
J Pharmacol Sci
February 2025
Department of Physical Chemistry for Bioactive Molecules, Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuyama University, 985-1 Sanzo, Higashimura-cho, Fukuyama, Hiroshima, 729-0292, Japan.
The purpose of the present study is to investigate changes in the kynurenine pathway after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and its effects on ICH-induced injury. The exposure of a primary rat microglial culture to thrombin increased the mRNA level of kynurenine 3-monooxygenase (KMO), and this increase was attenuated by a p38 MAPK inhibitor. Thrombin also increased the protein level of KMO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thromb Haemost
January 2025
Department of Neurology, General Hospital of Northern Theater Command; Shenyang, 110016, China. Electronic address:
Background: Endovascular treatment (EVT) alone was not demonstrated to be non-inferior to intravenous alteplase bridging EVT in acute large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke. Using cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury model, intravenous tenecteplase (TNK) was administrated after ischemia followed by reperfusion at various time points.
Objectives: To investigate whether intravenous TNK bridging EVT vs EVT alone could improve I/R injury, and this effect may be associated with the time from TNK to reperfusion.
Transplant Proc
January 2025
Neurology Service, Department of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Services, Istituto Mediterraneo per i Trapianti e Terapie ad Alta Specializzazione (ISMETT) - Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico (IRCCS), University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC), Palermo, Italy.
Background: After encephalopathy, epileptic seizures (ES) are the second most common neurologic complication after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) and may announce a disabling/fatal neurologic disease.
Methods: In this retrospective study, we collected clinical information from patients who underwent OLT at our institution and analyzed outcomes and potential risk factors for developing ES after OLT.
Results: Fourteen of our 376 patients (3.
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