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Revista Cubana de Medicina

Print version ISSN 0034-7523On-line version ISSN 1561-302X

Abstract

MACHADO, Calixto; PEREZ-NELLAR, Jesús  and  SCHERLE, Claudio. Physiopathologic mechanisms in encephalic death. Rev cubana med [online]. 2009, vol.48, n.4, pp.204-212. ISSN 0034-7523.

Encephalic death is bases on a clinical diagnosis and it is accepted like a synonym of subject death. The person arrives to this stage when a catastrophic lesion provokes an irreversible coma with a lack of reflexes from the encephalic trunk and apnea. The encephalic death is defined like an irreversible loss of all encephalon including the brain hemispheres and the encephalic trunk. The different causes of irreversible loss of encephalon functions are the same described provoking a coma, which are grouped in: structural and diffuse-metabolic multifocal. The structural causes are subdivided in compressive and destructives. The compressive ones cause space problems in intracranial cavity leading to an increase of intracranial pressure and herniations. The destructive ones leading to encephalic death affect the diencephalon, the encephalic trunk and brain hemispheres. Diffuse-metabolic multifocal etiologies are a very varied group of causes provoking the irreversible loss of encephalon functions through diverse biochemical and physiopathologic mechanisms. However, the etiologies described provoke the irreversible lack of brain blood flux the final cause leading to destruction of intracranial structures. Although the encephalic death is based on a clinical diagnosis, knowledge of physiopathology of this status allows to study the potential mechanisms leading to a patient evolve to an encephalic death and be certain that there is a irreversibility of this diagnosis.

Keywords : Death; encephalic death; physiopathology; coma; intracranial pressure.

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