The purpose of this study was to examine the changes in cerebral hemodynamics of head-injured patients undergoing
barbiturate treatment of refractory
intracranial hypertension. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and metabolism variables were measured in 67 severely head-injured patients at the following times: before the loading dose of
pentobarbital; after the loading dose of
pentobarbital (average
pentobarbital level 28.1+/-8.3 microg/mL); and 3 days later, when the peak
pentobarbital level averaged 42.5+/-17.2 microg/mL. Intracranial pressure (ICP) and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) were decreased by the loading dose of
pentobarbital by an average of 12 and 9 mm Hg, respectively. Cerebral perfusion pressure (
CPP) was unchanged when the entire group was analyzed together. CBF, cerebral oxygen consumption (CMR(O)2), and arteriovenous
oxygen difference (AVD(O)2) were significantly decreased after the loading dose of
pentobarbital, by 20%, 31%, and 11%, respectively. The average cerebrovascular resistance (CVR) was increased by 20%. The change in CMR(O)2 with the loading dose of
pentobarbital was closely related to the pretreatment value (n = 67, r2 = 0.65, p < .001). Thirty (45%) of the patients had a "good ICP response," with a reduction in ICP from 34+/-9 to 15+/-5 mm Hg after the initial loading dose of
pentobarbital. Twenty-seven (40%) of the patients had a "partial ICP response," with ICP decreasing but still remaining above 20 mm Hg after the loading dose of
pentobarbital. In the remaining 10 patients, ICP did not change or even increased after
pentobarbital. In the 30 patients with a good ICP response, pretreatment CMR(O)2 and AVD(O)2 were greater before administration of
pentobarbital, and CMR(O)2 and AVD(O)2 decreased more with the loading dose of
pentobarbital, than in the patients with partial or no ICP response. The outcome was significantly better in the patients with a good or partial ICP response to
pentobarbital, with 21% of these patients having a good recovery or moderate disability at 3 months after injury, compared with 100%
persistent vegetative state or death in the nonresponders. In summary,
barbiturate coma can be a useful treatment modality for acutely reducing ICP in selected patients. Patients with overwhelmingly severe
injuries are not likely to benefit, partly because their CMR(O)2 is already markedly reduced by the injury and partly because their outcome is already predetermined by the injury. Patients with systemic
hypotension are not likely to have a good response because
hypotension limits the amount of
barbiturates that can be given.