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New AAN
Guideline on determining Brain Death
provides more clarity and direction
Newswise, June 2010 — In an effort to create
a uniform and accurate method for
determining brain death, the American
Academy of Neurology has issued an updated
guideline that provides doctors with a
step-by-step process for determining brain
death in adults. The guideline is published
in the June 8, 2010, issue of Neurology®,
the medical journal of the American Academy
of Neurology.
“The new AAN guideline is an improvement
over the 1995 guideline and examines recent
studies on clinical determination of brain
death,” said lead guideline author Eelco
Wijdicks, MD, PhD, with the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn. and Fellow of the American
Academy of Neurology.
“The brain death diagnosis can be made only
after a comprehensive clinical evaluation
and often involves more than 25 separate
assessments. The new guideline includes a
checklist that will help doctors with this
diagnosis.”
Brain death is the permanent loss of brain
function and means the person has died. The
only way to keep the lifeless body working
is through intensive care support. Brain
death can result from a severe traumatic
brain injury, stroke or prolonged CPR after
cardiac arrest. No further medical support
is needed unless the person’s organs can be
donated.
According to the guideline, there are three
signs that a person’s brain has permanently
stopped functioning.
First, the person is comatose, and the cause
of the coma is known. Second, all brainstem
reflexes have permanently stopped working.
Third, breathing has permanently stopped. A
ventilator, or breathing machine, must be
used to keep the body functioning.
The guideline describes several complex
steps doctors must follow to diagnose brain
death. It carefully reviewed the best way to
demonstrate absence of breathing.
The guideline also concludes that laboratory
tests such as EEG or cerebral flow studies
are not needed to come to a diagnosis. The
guideline also makes clear that this complex
process must be completed by a doctor with
considerable skill and experience in
diagnosing brain death.
The American Academy of Neurology, an
association of more than 22,000 neurologists
and neuroscience professionals, is dedicated
to promoting the highest quality
patient-centered neurologic care.
A neurologist is a doctor with specialized
training in diagnosing, treating and
managing disorders of the brain and nervous
system such as Parkinson’s disease, ALS (Lou
Gehrig’s disease), dementia, multiple
sclerosis and stroke.
For more information about the American
Academy of Neurology, visit
http://www.aan.com.
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