Traumatic brain injuries represent an important health problem; they occur with high frequency, the population affected contains many previously healthy young people, and they are associated with high mortality and morbidity. The proposed study continues on our 16 years of experience in conducting clinical trials evaluating treatments for preventing seizures following head injury (Dilantin Prophylaxis of Post-traumatic Seizures, Valproate for Prophylaxis of Post-traumatic Seizures) and in examining neurobehavioral outcome after head injury. Our previous trials showed that Dilantin prevents early seizures but is ineffective in preventing epilepsy following head trauma and that Valproate is possibly associated with higher mortality that short-term Dilantin. The trials and outcome studies found that epileptic seizures, serious cognitive difficulties, high unemployment, and inability to live independently are common among survivors of moderate or severe head injury. Using a randomized, double-blind design, the present study will evaluate magnesium sulfate as a neuroprotectant and anti-epileptogenic agent following head injury. Magnesium sulfate is a widely used, well-tolerated compound that has been shown in the laboratory to be effective in reducing seizures and also in limiting neuronal damage and in improving functional outcome following experimental head injury. Specifically, the study will test the hypothesis that magnesium sulfate, when given within 8 hours of a moderate or severe head injury, a) increases survival, b) decreases seizures, and c) improves neurobehavioral functioning. Additionally, the study will: assess the effects of timing of dosage (e.g. <4 hours vs. 4-8 hours), gender, and race; determine the rate of adverse events: and evaluate the time course and correlates of total and ionized magnesium concentrations. Patients with moderate or severe head injury (post-resuscitation Glasgow Coma Scale 3-12) will be randomized to receive high doses of magnesium sulfate or placebo. Treatment will be started as soon as possible, and definitely within 8 hours of injury. The initial bolus of magnesium sulfate will be followed by a 7 day infusion to keep magnesium levels high during the period when secondary damage from the head injury is most likely. Patients will be closely monitored for survival and seizures over the first six months after injury and will have a comprehensive neurobehavioral assessment at six months after injury. In summary, this placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial will determine the effects of magnesium sulfate on survival, post-traumatic seizures, and the patients behavioral functioning following head injury.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NS019643-16
Application #
2891620
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-NEUA (02))
Program Officer
Jacobs, Margaret
Project Start
1983-07-01
Project End
2002-07-31
Budget Start
1999-08-01
Budget End
2000-07-31
Support Year
16
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Washington
Department
Neurosurgery
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
135646524
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98195
Dikmen, Sureyya; Machamer, Joan; Temkin, Nancy (2017) Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Longitudinal Study of Cognition, Functional Status, and Post-Traumatic Symptoms. J Neurotrauma 34:1524-1530
Alali, Aziz S; Vavrek, Darcy; Barber, Jason et al. (2015) Comparative study of outcome measures and analysis methods for traumatic brain injury trials. J Neurotrauma 32:581-9
Machamer, Joan; Temkin, Nancy; Dikmen, Sureyya (2013) Health-related quality of life in traumatic brain injury: is a proxy report necessary? J Neurotrauma 30:1845-51
Badri, Shide; Chen, Jasper; Barber, Jason et al. (2012) Mortality and long-term functional outcome associated with intracranial pressure after traumatic brain injury. Intensive Care Med 38:1800-9
Dikmen, Sureyya; Machamer, Joan; Fann, Jesse R et al. (2010) Rates of symptom reporting following traumatic brain injury. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 16:401-11
Anderson, Gail D; Temkin, Nancy R; Dikmen, Sureyya S et al. (2009) Haptoglobin phenotype and apolipoprotein E polymorphism: relationship to posttraumatic seizures and neuropsychological functioning after traumatic brain injury. Epilepsy Behav 16:501-6
Pagulayan, Kathleen Farrell; Hoffman, Jeanne M; Temkin, Nancy R et al. (2008) Functional limitations and depression after traumatic brain injury: examination of the temporal relationship. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 89:1887-92
Pagulayan, Kathleen Farrell; Temkin, Nancy R; Machamer, Joan E et al. (2007) The measurement and magnitude of awareness difficulties after traumatic brain injury: a longitudinal study. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 13:561-70
Chaytor, Naomi; Temkin, Nancy; Machamer, Joan et al. (2007) The ecological validity of neuropsychological assessment and the role of depressive symptoms in moderate to severe traumatic brain injury. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 13:377-85
Anderson, Gail D; Temkin, Nancy R; Awan, Asaad B et al. (2007) Effect of time, injury, age and ethanol on interpatient variability in valproic acid pharmacokinetics after traumatic brain injury. Clin Pharmacokinet 46:307-18

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