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Clinical Pearl: Prone Positioning with Elevated Intracranial Pressure

Season 1 Episode 95 Published 1 year, 3 months ago
Description

Today we have a mini-episode / clinical pearl. We previously discussed the PROSEVA trial and the evidence for prone positioning in ARDS. In that trial, patients with elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) were excluded. We are joined now by Dr. Jon Rosenberg, a neuro intensivist, to discuss his how prone positioning can still be employed for patients with neurologic injuries and elevated ICP.

 

Dr. Jon Rosenberg is an assistant professor of neurology and neurosurgery at Westchester Medical Center, New York Medical College. He’s also the associate program director of the Neurocritical Care Fellowship at Westchester Medical Center and a frequent contributor to the Neurocritical Care Society podcast.

 

  1. Elevated Intracranial Pressure (ICP) and Proning: A Common Misconception
  • Elevated ICP is often considered a contraindication to proning, but this is more of a relative caution rather than an absolute contraindication.
  • Many neuro ICUs have successfully proned patients with elevated ICP, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic, when critical care units had to manage both respiratory failure and neurological conditions simultaneously.
  1. Patient Selection for Proning with Elevated ICP
  • Most patients with elevated ICP can still be proned, including those with:
    • Global cerebral edema (e.g., post-anoxic brain injury, liver failure)
    • Focal lesions (e.g., traumatic brain injury, large ischemic strokes, intracerebral hemorrhage)
  • Situations where proning might be more concerning:
    • Severe hemodynamic instability (multi-pressor shock)
    • Morbid obesity (e.g., >300 lbs), where physically flipping the patient is a major challenge
  1. Theoretical Concerns with Proning in Elevated ICP
  • Loss of neurological exam access (sedation + flipped position makes pupil and motor exam difficult)
  • Jugular venous compression (especially if the head is turned to one side)
  • Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow obstruction, depending on the lesion
  • Risk of increased ICP if venous outflow is impaired or head positioning is not optimized
  1. Best Practices for Proning Patients with Elevated ICP
  • Patients with invasive ICP monitors vs. without monitors:
    • If possible, placing an ICP monitor (EVD or parenchymal bolt) before proning provides better guidance.
    • Without a monitor, providers must rely on other practices like maintaining strict MAP goals and sodium targets, and indirect signs of increased ICP.
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