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Volume 4

Clinical Neuropsychology: Open Access

Neuropsychiatry 2018

August 27-28, 2018

August 27-28, 2018 Tokyo, Japan

8

th

Global Experts Meeting on

Advances in Neurology and Neuropsychiatry

Traumatic brain injury: Secondary brain injury management and the mitigation of cognitive,

psychological and physical impairment

Helen Fernandes

Addenbrooke’s Hospital, UK

T

rauma is the most common cause of death for those under the age of 45. Trauma also results in millions of non-fatal

injuries leading to life-long disability. Of all the types of injuries, Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI) are the most likely to

result in death or permanent disability. About 90% of injury-related deaths occur in Low and Middle-Income Countries

(LMICs). Public health policy and safety prevention measures are necessary in order to address primary injury, which occurs

at the time of impact. Secondary brain insults occur following the impact and include amongst other problems, hypoxia,

and hypotension, further injury from compression (e.g. expanding hematoma), elevated intracranial pressure, seizures and

infection. High quality neurotrauma care is necessary in order to address secondary insults. Such high-quality care relies on a

multidisciplinary approach with integrated prehospital, emergency, neurosurgical, intensive care and rehabilitative pathways.

Current research efforts utilize a variety of methods, such as randomized trials (decompressive craniectomy in TBI), non-

experimental comparative effectiveness research and large collaborative programs aiming to improve neurotrauma care in

LMICs.

helen.fernandes@addenbrookes.nhs.uk

ClinNeuropsychol 2018, Volume 3

DOI: 10.4172/2472-095X-C1-003