“THE MANTLE” bundle for minimizing cerebral hypoxia in severe
traumatic brain injury
by Daniel Agustin
Godoy, Francisco Murillo-Cabezas, Jose Ignacio Suarez, Rafael Badenes, Paolo
Pelosi and Chiara Robba
Critical Care volume 27,
Article number: 13 Published: 12
January 2023
Abstract
To ensure neuronal survival after severe traumatic brain
injury, oxygen supply is essential. Cerebral tissue oxygenation represents the
balance between oxygen supply and consumption, largely reflecting the adequacy
of cerebral perfusion. Multiple physiological parameters determine the oxygen
delivered to the brain, including blood pressure, hemoglobin level, systemic
oxygenation, microcirculation and many factors are involved in the
delivery of oxygen to its final recipient, through the respiratory chain.
Brain tissue hypoxia occurs when the supply of oxygen is not adequate or when
for some reasons it cannot be used at the cellular level. The causes of hypoxia
are variable and can be analyzed pathophysiologically following “the oxygen
route.” The current trend is precision medicine, individualized and
therapeutically directed to the pathophysiology of specific brain damage;
however, this requires the availability of multimodal monitoring. For this
purpose, we developed the acronym “THE MANTLE,” a bundle of therapeutical
interventions, which covers and protects the brain, optimizing the components
of the oxygen transport system from ambient air to the mitochondria.
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