Background: One third of all ICH patients require intubation and mechanical ventilation and 1/3 of all ventilated patients require tracheostomy (i.e.≈10% of all ICH patients require tracheostomy). As shown previously, predisposing factors for tracheostomy are hematoma volume, hemorrhage location, presence of intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), and occlusive hydrocephalus as well as presence of COPD (Huttner HB et al 2006 CVD). Sustained restricted vigilance and impaired consciousness after ICH is likely to result in failure of extubation, raise in incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia, increased amount of sedative drugs and prolonged duration of neurocritical care. Hence an early tracheostomy may be beneficial in terms of reduced duration of mechanical ventilation. Basic hypothesis: Compared to patients with conventional ("late") tracheostomy between day 12 - 14, patients with "early" tracheostomy within 72h after admission will have: * shorter cumulative time of mechanical ventilation * less incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia * less consumption of sedative drugs * shorter duration of stay in neurocritical care unit Randomization: Consecutive eligible patients are randomly assigned to Either "early" tracheostomy within 72h after hospital admission Or "late" tracheostomy (= control group; undergoing conventional tracheostomy between day 12 - 14 if extubation fails) Both groups receive plastic tracheostomy
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
7
Patients with supratentorial ICH who require mechanical ventilation, fulfill the inclusion criteria, and have been randomized to the "treatment arm" will receive an early tracheostomy within 72h after symptom onset.
Compared to the "early tracheostomy"-group, those patients who have been randomized to "late tracheostomy" will undergo conventional tracheostomy between day 12 - 14 if extubation fails
University or Erlangen-Nuremberg
Erlangen, Germany
Cumulative time requiring mechanical ventilation and Overall duration of neurocritical care
Primary End-points: * Cumulative time requiring mechanical ventilation * Overall duration of neurocritical care
Time frame: 30 days
Incidence of respirator-associated pneumonia
Time frame: 30 days
Cumulative consumption of sedative drugs
Time frame: 30 days
Incidence of episodes with increased intracranial pressure
Time frame: 30 days
In-hospital mortality
Time frame: 30 days
3-months functional outcome (mRS)
functional outcome after 3 months using the modified Rankin Scale
Time frame: 90 days
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