Abstract

BackgroundPost-craniotomy intracranial air can be present in patients scheduled for air ambulance transport to their home hospital. We aimed to assess risk for in-flight intracranial pressure (ICP) increases related to observed intracranial air volumes, hypothetical sea level pre-transport ICP, and different potential flight levels and cabin pressures.MethodsA cohort of consecutive subdural hematoma evacuation patients from one University Medical Centre was assessed with post-operative intracranial air volume measurements by computed tomography. Intracranial pressure changes related to estimated intracranial air volume effects of changing atmospheric pressure (simulating flight and cabin pressure changes up to 8000 ft) were simulated using an established model for intracranial pressure and volume relations.ResultsApproximately one third of the cohort had post-operative intracranial air. Of these, approximately one third had intracranial air volumes less than 11 ml. The simulation estimated that the expected changes in intracranial pressure during ‘flight’ would not result in intracranial hypertension. For intracranial air volumes above 11 ml, the simulation suggested that it was possible that intracranial hypertension could develop ‘inflight’ related to cabin pressure drop. Depending on the pre-flight intracranial pressure and air volume, this could occur quite early during the assent phase in the flight profile.DiscussionThese findings support the idea that there should be radiographic verification of the presence or absence of intracranial air after craniotomy for patients planned for long distance air transport.ConclusionsVery small amounts of air are clinically inconsequential. Otherwise, air transport with maintained ground-level cabin pressure should be a priority for these patients.

Highlights

  • Post-craniotomy intracranial air can be present in patients scheduled for air ambulance transport to their home hospital

  • Air transport with maintained ground-level cabin pressure should be a priority for these patients

  • If a post-operative head computed tomographic (CT) can show that there is air but only a minimal amount (11 ml or less), these findings suggest that this air by itself, along with a routine flight plan and normal cabin pressure, should not be a danger to this patient

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Summary

Introduction

Post-craniotomy intracranial air can be present in patients scheduled for air ambulance transport to their home hospital. If intracranial air is present post-operatively [1, 2], for example after the surgical evacuation of an intracranial expansive lesion, it will be resorbed over time, over weeks [3, 4]. This study concerns assessment of risk for adverse medical consequences related to expansion of post-operative intracranial air. This is a clinical risk for patients who are transported postoperatively between hospitals by fixed wing air ambulance, where cabin pressures change in-flight. If the flight altitude change occurs more slowly, and likewise the cabin pressure change occurs more slowly, it is thought that ICP changes might not be as dramatic, related to cerebrospinal fluid flow out of the cranium over time [8]

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