Hyperosmolar Therapy in Neurotrauma
Purpose: To reduce elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) and mitigate secondary brain injury in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), intracerebral hemorrhage, or other causes of cerebral edema.
Indications
- Sustained ICP > 20–22 mmHg despite sedation and positioning
- Clinical signs of herniation (e.g., unilateral mydriasis, decerebrate posturing)
- Radiologic evidence of cerebral edema, midline shift, or compressed ventricles
Mechanism of Action
- Creates an osmotic gradient across the blood-brain barrier (BBB), drawing water from brain parenchyma into the intravascular space
- Reduces cerebral blood volume via plasma expansion and decreased blood viscosity
Main Agents
1. Mannitol
- Concentration: 20% (0.25–1.0 g/kg IV bolus)
- Onset: 15–30 min | Duration: 2–6 h
- Requires intact BBB to be effective
- Monitor serum osmolality (< 320 mOsm/kg) and renal function
- Risk: hypovolemia, renal failure, rebound ICP increase with repeated doses
2. Hypertonic Saline (HTS)
- Available concentrations: 3%, 7.5%, 23.4%
- Dosing examples:
- 3%: 250 mL over 20–30 min
- 7.5%: 100–150 mL bolus
- 23.4%: 30 mL bolus over 10–15 min via central line only
- Preferred in patients with hypotension or polyuria
- Monitor serum sodium (target: 145–155 mmol/L) and chloride
- Can be used as continuous infusion (e.g., 3% NaCl at 30–70 mL/h)
Comparative Notes
Feature | Mannitol | Hypertonic Saline |
---|---|---|
Volume status | Diuretic effect (↓ volume) | Volume expansion (↑ MAP) |
Use with hypotension | Contraindicated | Preferred |
Risk of rebound ICP | Higher | Lower |
Monitoring | Osmolality, Cr | Na+, Cl−, fluid balance |
Monitoring and Safety
- Frequent ICP monitoring (EVD or intraparenchymal probe)
- Serum sodium/osmolality every 4–6 h
- Renal function and urine output
- Avoid prolonged or aggressive correction (>12 mEq/L/24h in chronic hyponatremia)
Clinical Pearls
- Combine with other ICP-lowering strategies: sedation, head elevation, normocapnia
- Avoid hypotonic fluids (e.g., D5W, 0.45% NaCl)
- HTS may be preferred in polytrauma or hypotensive patients
- Do not use empirically without signs of raised ICP
References
- Neurosurg Clin N Am. 2025 Jul;36(3):387–400. doi:10.1016/j.nec.2025.03.007.
- Brain Trauma Foundation Guidelines (2020 update)