Abstract: | While corticosteroids in standard neurosurgical dosage do not appear to influence recovery from severe head injury or elevated intracranial pressure (ICP), some reports claim that a much higher dose is effective. A resultant hypothesis is that an abrupt increase in corticosteroid dosage in patients with severe head injury should cause a detectable reduction in ICP and in cerebral elastance within 48 hours. To test this hypothesis 20 consecutive patients with severe head injury, 12 of whom had had surgical decompression of mass lesions, were studied. All patients were artificially ventilated, and had continuous monitoring of ICP and intermittent testing of elastance by measurement of the volume-pressure response (VPR). For the first 12 hours after admission, patients received methylprednisolone, 40 mg every 6 hours. The dose was then increased abruptly by giving a single dose of 2 gm and 500 mg every 6 hours for the next 24 hours, then tapering rapidly. No significant change in ICP or VPR could be detected after 24 or 48 hours of high-dose steroid therapy. Of the 20 patients, 50% had good recovery or were moderately disabled, 15% were severely disabled or vegetative, and 35% had died. The course of ICP and the outcomes in these patients were not significantly different from those observed in a previous group of 262 patients managed in the same way for the high-dose regimen. There was, however, high incidence of gastric hemorrhage (50%) and of hyperglycemia with glucosuria (85%) in these 20 patients. These negative results in patients with head injury stand in marked contrast to our experience of the benefit of methylprednisolone in patients with brain tumors. |