Clinical Monitoring Scales in Acute Brain Injury: Assessment of Coma, Pain, Agitation, and Delirium

Serial clinical examination represents the most fundamental and basic form of neurological monitoring, and is often the first and only form of such monitoring in patients. Even in patients subjected to physiological monitoring using a range of technologies, the clinical examination remains an essent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurocritical care 2014-12, Vol.21 (Suppl 2), p.27-37
Hauptverfasser: Riker, Richard R., Fugate, Jennifer E.
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description Serial clinical examination represents the most fundamental and basic form of neurological monitoring, and is often the first and only form of such monitoring in patients. Even in patients subjected to physiological monitoring using a range of technologies, the clinical examination remains an essential tool to follow neurological progress. Key aspects of the clinical examination have now been systematized into scoring schemes, and address consciousness, pain, agitation, and delirium (PAD). The Glasgow Coma Scale has been the traditional tool to measure consciousness, but the full outline of unresponsiveness (FOUR) score has recently been validated in a variety of settings, and at present, both represent clinically useful tools. Assessment of PAD in neurologically compromised patients present special challenges. For pain, the Numeric Rating Scale is the preferred initial approach, with either the Behavioral Pain Scale or the Critical Care Pain Observation Tool in subjects who are not able to respond. The Nociception Coma Scale-Revised may be useful in patients with severe disorders of consciousness. Conventional sedation scoring tools for critical care, such as the Richmond Area Sedation Scale (RASS) and Sedation–Agitation Scale (SAS) may provide reasonable tools in some neurocritical care patients. The use of sedative drugs and neuromuscular blockers may invalidate the use of some clinical examination tools in others. The use of sedation interruption to assess neurological status can result in physiological derangement in unstable patients (such as those with uncontrolled intracranial hypertension), and is not recommended.
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Conventional sedation scoring tools for critical care, such as the Richmond Area Sedation Scale (RASS) and Sedation–Agitation Scale (SAS) may provide reasonable tools in some neurocritical care patients. The use of sedative drugs and neuromuscular blockers may invalidate the use of some clinical examination tools in others. 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subjects Analgesics
Anesthesia
Brain Injuries - diagnosis
Brain Injuries - psychology
Brain Injuries - therapy
Cardiac arrest
Clinical outcomes
Coma - diagnosis
Coma - etiology
Consciousness
Critical Care
Critical Care Medicine
Delirium
Delirium - diagnosis
Delirium - etiology
Glasgow Coma Scale
Humans
Intensive
Intensive care
Internal Medicine
Keywords
Medical prognosis
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mortality
Neurologic Examination
Neurology
Pain
Pain - diagnosis
Pain - etiology
Patients
Psychomotor Agitation - diagnosis
Psychomotor Agitation - etiology
Reproducibility of Results
Review Article
Trauma
Trauma Severity Indices
Traumatic brain injury
title Clinical Monitoring Scales in Acute Brain Injury: Assessment of Coma, Pain, Agitation, and Delirium
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