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Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ logoLink to Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ
. 2001 Sep;18(5):373–375. doi: 10.1136/emj.18.5.373

In patients with head injuries who undergo rapid sequence intubation using succinylcholine, does pretreatment with a competitive neuromuscular blocking agent improve outcome? A literature review

M Clancy 1, S Halford 1, R Walls 1, M Murphy 1
PMCID: PMC1725690  PMID: 11559609

Abstract

A literature search was undertaken for evidence of the effect of succinylcholine (SCH) on the intracranial pressure (ICP) of patients with acute brain injury and whether pretreatment with a defasciculating dose of competitive neuromuscular blocker is beneficial in this patient group. The authors could find no definitive evidence that SCH caused a rise in ICP in patients with brain injury. However, these studies were often weak and small. For those patients suffering acute traumatic brain injury the authors could find no studies that investigated the issue of pretreatment with defasciculating doses of competitive neuromuscular blockers and their effect on ICP in patients given SCH. There is level 2 evidence that SCH caused an increase in ICP for patients undergoing neurosurgery for brain tumours with elective anaesthesia and that pretreatment with defasciculating doses of neuromuscular blockers reduced such increases. It is unknown if this affects neurological outcome for this patient group.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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