Brain Death v. Comatose

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Nichole Weaver
MSN/Ed,RN,CCRN
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Study Tools For Brain Death v. Comatose

Cerebral Angiography Normal (Image)
Cerebral Blood Flow Scan (Image)
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Outline

Overview

Brain death is a diagnosis that indicates legal and clinical death

Nursing Points

General

  1. Comatose
    1. Unresponsive
    2. Blood Flow intact
    3. Brain activity present
  2. Brain Death
    1. No brainstem reflexes
      1. Cough/Gag/Corneal
      2. Breathing
    2. No blood flow to brain
    3. Clinically = Death
  3. Causes of Brain Death
    1. Severe anoxic brain injury
    2. Severe cerebral edema
      1. Stroke
      2. Trauma
    3. Severe hydrocephalus
    4. Brain herniation
    5. Massive Tumor or bleed

Assessment

  1. Diagnosing Brain Death
    1. Apnea Testing
      1. Optimize Vital Signs
      2. Hyperoxygenate
      3. Get pCO2 to 35-45 mmHg
      4. Turn off Vent x 10 minutes
      5. Watch for signs of respiratory effort
      6. Re-check ABG
      7. If pCO2 >60 mmHg = positive for brain death
      8. Abort if:
        1. Signs of breathing
        2. Hemodynamically unstable
    2. Brainstem reflexes
      1. Cough
        1. Use suction catheter if ventilated
      2. Gag
        1. Use yankauer in back of throat to test
      3. Corneal
        1. Cotton wisp touching cornea
        2. Blink = present
      4. NO pupillary response
      5. NO movement with pain
        1. Not even abnormal movements
    3. Positive Doll’s Eyes
    4. Nuclear imaging or cerebral angiography reveals NO blood flow

Therapeutic Management

  1. If suspect brain death, notify Organ Procurement Organization → do NOT approach
  2. Once brain death diagnosed – remove all life support. → Clinically dead

Nursing Concepts

  1. Intracranial Regulation / Cognition
    1. Assess LOC
    2. Assess for reflexes
    3. Assess for any response to stimuli
  2. End of Life
    1. Educate and support family
    2. Refer to Chaplain as appropriate

Patient Education

  1. Educate family on brain death testing process
  2. Educate family on meaning of brain death
  3. Provide compassion in this difficult time

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Transcript

This is a topic that both Jon and myself are very passionate about. It’s something that is NOT taught well in nursing school and creates some tense, stressful times in the clinical setting if you don’t really understand this. That is the difference between a patient who is Comatose and one who is Brain Dead. The media and Hollywood throw around the term “Brain Dead” very liberally and it creates misunderstandings in family members. So we want to help you understand this, and be able to help patients’ families through this difficult situation.

So remember from the levels of consciousness lesson that Comatose is a description of a level of consciousness where the patient is unresponsive. However, comatose patients will continue to have blood flow to the brain and some brain activity. You can see this is a cerebral angiogram and you can see all the arteries coming up past the brainstem and spreading throughout the brain. You can be comatose, or even in a persistent vegetative state, and still have flow and NOT be brain dead. Brain death, on the other hand is an actual clinical diagnosis. It indicates that the patient has an absence of all brainstem reflexes. What do we mean by that? Well the brainstem is responsible for all of the most basic functions of life – breathing, digestion, cough/gag/corneal reflexes, etc. Someone who is brain dead will have ZERO reflexes present. We will also see an absence of blood flow to the brain and a complete lack of brain wave activity. If you were doing this angiogram on a brain dead patient, it would be completely black – it’s kind of eerie.

There are a number of ways we diagnose brain death – one is with apnea testing. Remember we said that the brainstem controls breathing, right? So if they have no brainstem activity, they will not be able to initiate breaths at all. Normally when our CO2 levels rise, our brain signals for us to breathe – it is involuntary. So to test this, we will stabilize their vital signs and get their CO2 to a normal level (between 35 and 45). We will also hyperoxygenate them beforehand. Then, we will disconnect the ventilator for up to 10 minutes. If at any point they show ANY indication of respiratory effort (chest wall movement, gasping, etc.) or if they become hemodynamically unstable, we abort and put them back on the vent. But, if not, once 10 minutes passes, we quickly draw a blood gas, then put them back on the ventilator. If their CO2 has risen to over 60 mmHg, that is considered confirmation of brain death. Again, in a normal person a CO2 that high would have caused them to breathe. We will typically not even go to apnea testing until all other non-invasive tests have shown brain death – they should have NO response to pain and NO reflexes. No cough, gag, corneal, not even a babinski. Their doll’s eyes reflex will be positive – meaning their eyes turn with their head as if they were painted on. Then, finally we can use cerebral blood flow studies. These studies can be very eerie – if you remember what it looked like to have flow throughout the brain…..**click** this is what a nuclear scan looks like in someone who is brain dead. There is ZERO flow past the brain stem. This is also considered confirmatory for brain death.

Now, this is where it gets difficult. According to the National Institutes of Health – “Brain death is defined as the irreversible loss of all functions of the brain, including the brainstem. … A patient determined to be brain dead is legally and clinically dead.” It’s just as final as cardiac death. At this point we are supposed to disconnect the ventilator and remove all forms of life support. Patients’ families find this difficult to understand because we have them on the ventilator – so as far as they can tell the patient is still breathing and their heart is still beating. But remember that the heart is electrically independent from the brain, so it will continue to beat as long as it is effectively oxygenated and doesn’t experience damage. We have about 24 hours before circulating toxins from the rest of the body shutting down begin to affect the heart. That is the time-frame in which we look to organ donation.

So just remember that brain death is considered legal and clinical death, just like cardiac death. It means there is no blood flow, no reflexes, and no brain activity. This is a very difficult thing for families to understand because of the common misunderstandings and misuse of the term brain dead. These patients are ideal candidates to be organ donors if their family consents, BUT – HUGE note here – you should NEVER approach a family about organ donation. If you have a patient who may be brain dead, contact your local Organ PRocurement Organization – they will take care of those details – YOU just take care of the patient and their family.

We hope this has helped you understand the reality of brain death. Coming from an ICU background, especially in the Neuro ICU, Jon and I have seen this dozens of times between the two of us. One of those stories will be represented in the Case Study in the Cerebral Perfusion Pressure lesson, so make sure you check it out! It’s so important that we can help families through this difficult time by giving them the right information! Now, go out and be THAT nurse. We love you guys! Happy nursing!

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FINAL EXAM

Concepts Covered:

  • Disorders of the Adrenal Gland
  • Disorders of Thermoregulation
  • Disorders of the Thyroid & Parathyroid Glands
  • Central Nervous System Disorders – Brain
  • Musculoskeletal Trauma
  • Integumentary Disorders
  • Neurological Trauma
  • Respiratory Emergencies
  • Renal Disorders
  • Shock
  • Cardiac Disorders
  • Emergency Care of the Cardiac Patient
  • Circulatory System
  • Acute & Chronic Renal Disorders
  • Urinary System
  • Communication
  • Noninfectious Respiratory Disorder
  • Respiratory System
  • Respiratory Disorders
  • Delegation
  • Prioritization
  • Test Taking Strategies
  • Emergency Care of the Trauma Patient
  • Immunological Disorders
  • Microbiology
  • Oncology Disorders
  • Upper GI Disorders
  • Infectious Respiratory Disorder
  • Oncologic Disorders
  • Pregnancy Risks
  • Emergency Care of the Neurological Patient
  • Fundamentals of Emergency Nursing

Study Plan Lessons

Addisons Disease
Hyperthermia (Thermoregulation)
Hypothermia (Thermoregulation)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Hyperparathyroidism
Hypoparathyroidism
Cerebral Perfusion Pressure CPP
Intracranial Pressure ICP
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Skull Fractures
Burn Injuries
Spinal Cord Injury
Blunt Chest Trauma
Dialysis & Other Renal Points
Shock
Ventricular Tachycardia (V-tach)
Ventricular Fibrillation (V Fib)
The EKG (ECG) Graph
Supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT)
Premature Ventricular Contraction (PVC)
Performing Cardiac (Heart) Monitoring
Pacemakers
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Chronic Kidney (Renal) Disease (CKD)
Electrolytes Involved in Cardiac (Heart) Conduction
Dysrhythmia Emergencies
Communicating with Providers
Cardiac Stress Test
Atrial Flutter
Atrial Fibrillation (A Fib)
Arterial Pressure Monitoring
3rd Degree AV Heart Block (Complete Heart Block)
1st Degree AV Heart Block
Vent Alarms
Trach Care
Artificial Airways
ABGs Tic-Tac-Toe interpretation Method
ABG Course (Arterial Blood Gas) Introduction
Delegation
Prioritization
Chest Tube Management
Crush Injuries
Crash Cart
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for West Nile Virus
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Respiratory Failure
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Pulmonary Embolism
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Lung Cancer
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Angina
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Acute Kidney (Renal) Injury (AKI)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Valve Disorders
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Pneumothorax & Hemothorax
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Pancreatitis
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Lyme Disease
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Influenza (Flu)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cardiomyopathy
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cardiogenic Shock
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Anaphylaxis
Thoracentesis
Airway Suctioning
Isolation Precautions (MRSA, C. Difficile, Meningitis, Pertussis, Tuberculosis, Neutropenia)
Coronavirus (COVID-19) Nursing Care and General Information
Neurological Fractures
Brain Death v. Comatose
Peritoneal Dialysis (PD)
Hemodialysis (Renal Dialysis)
MI Surgical Intervention
Hemodynamics
Intracranial Hemorrhage
Ventilator Settings
Cardiopulmonary Arrest
Head Trauma & Traumatic Brain Injury
Penetrating Abdominal Trauma
Triage in the ER
Critical Incident Management
Prioritizing Assessments
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Myocardial Infarction (MI)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Sepsis