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Advances in Neurocritical Care
Topic Information
Dear Colleagues,
It is an enormous honor to be topic editors for this special collection of advances in neurocritical care. This topic is dedicated to publishing outstanding study results in a bundle of high-quality academic journals, including JCM, Biomedicines, Brain Sciences, Medicina, and JVD. We welcome basic and translational science reports, clinical trials, systematic reviews, predictive modeling studies, advances in therapies and monitoring, analytic and methodologic advances, and all kinds of health services research related to neurocritical illness. This special collection is directed toward neurosurgeons, neuro-intensivists, neurologists, anesthesiologists, emergency physicians, and critical care nurses treating patients with acute neurologic disorders. Hopefully, this special collection will provide a comprehensive overview of current developments in neurology, neurosurgery, and neuroanesthesia and includes information about new therapeutic avenues and technological innovations in neurocritical diseases.
Prof. Dr. Guoyi Gao
Dr. Guangzhi Shi
Prof. Dr. Zhixiong Liu
Topic Editors
Keywords
- neurocritical care
- monitoring
- treatment
- pharmaceutics
- data processing
- artificial intelligence
- preclinical study
- clinical study
Participating Journals
Journal Name | Impact Factor | CiteScore | Launched Year | First Decision (median) | APC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Biomedicines
|
3.9 | 5.2 | 2013 | 15.3 Days | CHF 2600 |
Brain Sciences
|
2.7 | 4.8 | 2011 | 12.9 Days | CHF 2200 |
Journal of Clinical Medicine
|
3.0 | 5.7 | 2012 | 17.3 Days | CHF 2600 |
Journal of Vascular Diseases
|
- | - | 2022 | 24.3 Days | CHF 1000 |
Medicina
|
2.4 | 3.3 | 1920 | 17.8 Days | CHF 2200 |
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Published Papers (20 papers)
Planned Papers
The below list represents only planned manuscripts. Some of these manuscripts have not been received by the Editorial Office yet. Papers submitted to MDPI journals are subject to peer-review.
Title: Retrospective analysis on long-time external drainage through ventricular abdominal subcutaneous tunnel in treatment of infectious hydrocephalus
Authors: PAN Dong-chao; LIU Dong-sheng; FU Ji-di
Affiliation: Department of Neurosurgery, Plastic Surgery Hospital(Institute),CAMS,PUMC,Beijing 100012,China
Abstract: Objective: To explore the advantages and disadvantages of lateral ventricular abdominal-wall subcutaneous tunnel drainage in the treatment of infectious hydrocephalus. Methods: 384 patients with hydrocephalus secondary to intracranial infection were included. After ventricular and lumbar cistern external drainage and routine anti infection treatment,ventricular abdominal wall external drainage was performed when the bacterial culture in cerebrospinal fluid was negative three times in two weeks as a transitional treatment before shunting.After waiting for the physical and chemical indexes of cerebrospinal fluid to return to normal,the indexes of cerebrospinal luid were still stable after drug withdrawal for more than 2 weeks,and ventriculoperitoneal shunt was performed.The advantages and existing problems of this treatment in reducing the shunt failure rate were explored. Results Of 384 patients,244(63.54%) were positive for bacteria in cerebrospinal fluid. For all 384 cases,lateral ventricular abdominal-wall subcutaneous tunnel drainage were performed,including 37 of isolated ventricle,7 of infection during drainage(4 were cured) and 6 died(3 of infection,1 of hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage,1 of giving up,1 of brain stem failure). Finally,for 378 of the 384 cases,ventriculoperitoneal shunt were performed. The shortest drainage time was 14 days and the longest was 387 days,with an average of 95.7 days. One-year follow-up showed that 369 cases(97.62%) were successful,9 failed(5 of infection after shunt, 4 of shunt simple mechanical blockage),and the failure rate was 2.38%. Of the 9 failed cases,6 died(2of infection, 1 died of epilepsy 4 months after discharge, 1 died of unknown cause 7 months after discharge,1 died of hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage,1 died of shunt blockage). Compared with traditional short-term extracorporeal drainage(median 13 days),long-lerm extracorporeal drainage( median 69 days) had definite help in improving the cure rate of intracranial infection and infectious hydrocephalus. Conclusion: Lateral ventricular abdominal-wall subcutaneous tunnel drainage can effectively reduce the failure rate of infectious hydrocephalus shunt. Key words: infectious hydrocephalus; ventriculitis; ventricular peritoneal drainage; ventriculoperitoneal shunt