Comparison Between Transcranial Color Doppler Ultrasonography and Angiography in the Confirmation of Brain Death

Cerebral blood flow tests have increasingly been advocated for the confirmation of brain death (BD). Angiography has been considered the gold standard in the diagnosis of BD but is invasive. We validated transcranial color Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) to confirm BD by comparing it to angiography. F...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation proceedings 2006-06, Vol.38 (5), p.1213-1217
Hauptverfasser: Poularas, J., Karakitsos, D., Kouraklis, G., Kostakis, A., De Groot, E., Kalogeromitros, A., Bilalis, D., Boletis, J., Karabinis, A.
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container_end_page 1217
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1213
container_title Transplantation proceedings
container_volume 38
creator Poularas, J.
Karakitsos, D.
Kouraklis, G.
Kostakis, A.
De Groot, E.
Kalogeromitros, A.
Bilalis, D.
Boletis, J.
Karabinis, A.
description Cerebral blood flow tests have increasingly been advocated for the confirmation of brain death (BD). Angiography has been considered the gold standard in the diagnosis of BD but is invasive. We validated transcranial color Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) to confirm BD by comparing it to angiography. Forty patients experienced the clinical diagnosis of brain death due to head injury in 19 cases (47.5%), cerebral hemorrhage in 11 (27.5%), subarachnoid hemorrhage in 7 (17.5%), and cerebral infarction in 3 (7.5%). Blood pressure, heart rate, S PO2, and P CO2 were monitored throughout the study. Patients were excluded if episodes of hypoxia, arrhythmia, and hypotension occurred during examinations, or if the TCD was not technically feasible. Both angiography and TCD confirmed BD in all patients. The agreement between the above methods to confirm BD was 100%. Angiography showed the absence of filling of intracranial arteries, while TCD revealed: (1) brief systolic forward flow or systolic spikes and diastolic reversed flow (50%); (2) brief systolic forward flow or systolic spikes and no diastolic flow (25%); (3) no demonstrable flow in a patient in whom flow had been clearly documented on a previous TCD examination (12.5%). Five patients required repeated TCD examinations, because of initial detection of a diastolic to-and-fro flow pattern. BD was confirmed by TCD in the above patients after 30 hours of clinical BD. TCD was a sensitive tool to diagnose BD, affording a reliable alternative examination to standard angiography.
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Angiography showed the absence of filling of intracranial arteries, while TCD revealed: (1) brief systolic forward flow or systolic spikes and diastolic reversed flow (50%); (2) brief systolic forward flow or systolic spikes and no diastolic flow (25%); (3) no demonstrable flow in a patient in whom flow had been clearly documented on a previous TCD examination (12.5%). Five patients required repeated TCD examinations, because of initial detection of a diastolic to-and-fro flow pattern. BD was confirmed by TCD in the above patients after 30 hours of clinical BD. 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Angiography showed the absence of filling of intracranial arteries, while TCD revealed: (1) brief systolic forward flow or systolic spikes and diastolic reversed flow (50%); (2) brief systolic forward flow or systolic spikes and no diastolic flow (25%); (3) no demonstrable flow in a patient in whom flow had been clearly documented on a previous TCD examination (12.5%). Five patients required repeated TCD examinations, because of initial detection of a diastolic to-and-fro flow pattern. BD was confirmed by TCD in the above patients after 30 hours of clinical BD. 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subjects Adult
Angiography
Brain Death - diagnosis
Brain Death - diagnostic imaging
Cerebral Hemorrhage
Cerebral Infarction
Craniocerebral Trauma
Glasgow Coma Scale
Humans
Middle Aged
Patient Selection
Reproducibility of Results
Sensitivity and Specificity
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial
title Comparison Between Transcranial Color Doppler Ultrasonography and Angiography in the Confirmation of Brain Death
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