PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Post-traumatic vasospasm: An overlooked threat after brain injury

Enhanced detection methods and precise treatments could minimize brain damage caused by post-traumatic vasospasm in head trauma cases

2025-10-17
(Press-News.org)

A new review published in the Journal of Intensive Medicine on 25 July, 2025 and led by Dr. Alice Jacquens and Dr. Clara Perrault from Pitié Salpêtrière Hospital, Paris, France, sheds light on an under-recognized complication of traumatic brain injury (TBI): post-traumatic vasospasm (PTV).

PTV is a sudden narrowing of brain arteries that can lead to stroke and long-term neurological damage. It may affect up to 60% of TBI patients but is often missed, especially in intensive care units where patients are sedated or in a coma. Unlike vasospasm after brain aneurysms, PTV occurs earlier, resolves faster, and may follow various patterns depending on the type of trauma.

The review summarizes current knowledge on PTV’s causes, detection, and treatments. Key tools like transcranial Doppler ultrasound and S100 protein blood tests can help with early diagnosis. Treatment options include nimodipine and intra-arterial milrinone, though evidence is limited and more studies are needed.

The authors call for systematic monitoring of vasospasm after TBI and propose a classification of PTV based on trauma type. They also explore specific biological mechanisms involving inflammation, blood degradation products, and vasoconstrictors like endothelin-1.

“Post-traumatic vasospasm is often silent but dangerous,” says Dr. Jacquens. “Recognizing it early can help prevent secondary brain injury.”

With millions of TBIs occurring each year, this work highlights the urgent need for greater clinical awareness and focused research.

 

***

 

Reference
DOI: 10.1016/j.jointm.2025.05.004

 

About Dr. Alice Jacquens
Alice Jacquens, M.D., Ph.D. is an anesthesiologist-intensivist at Pitié Salpêtrière Hospital (AP-HP, Paris) and a neuroscience researcher at Sorbonne University. Her work focuses on brain injury and neuroinflammation, with a particular interest in secondary complications of TBI.

 

About Dr. Clara Perrault
Clara Perrault, M.D. is an anesthesiologist currently practicing at the Centre Hospitalier de Saint-Denis (Réunion Island) and will return to the Pitié Salpêtrière Hospital in 2026. She has a special interest in post-resuscitation care and neurocritical complications.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists smash record in stacking semiconductor transistors for large-area electronics

2025-10-17
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST; Saudi Arabia) researchers have set a record in microchip design, achieving the first six-stack hybrid CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor) for large-area electronics. With no other reported hybrid CMOS exceeding two stacks, the feat marks a new benchmark in integration density and efficiency, opening possibilities in electronic miniaturization and performance.  Among microchip technologies, CMOS microchips are found in nearly all electronics, from phones and televisions to satellites and medical devices. Compared with conventional silicon chips, hybrid CMOS microchips hold greater promise ...

Large language models prioritize helpfulness over accuracy in medical contexts

2025-10-17
Large language models (LLMs) can store and recall vast quantities of medical information, but their ability to process this information in rational ways remains variable. A new study led by investigators from Mass General Brigham demonstrated a vulnerability in that LLMs are designed to be sycophantic, or excessively helpful and agreeable, which leads them to overwhelmingly fail to appropriately challenge illogical medical queries despite possessing the information necessary to do so. Findings, published in npj Digital Medicine, demonstrate that targeted training and fine-tuning can ...

In a surprising discovery, scientists find tiny loops in the genomes of dividing cells

2025-10-17
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Before cells can divide, they first need to replicate all of their chromosomes, so that each of the daughter cells can receive a full set of genetic material. Until now, scientists had believed that as division occurs, the genome loses the distinctive 3D internal structure that it typically forms. Once division is complete, it was thought, the genome gradually regains that complex, globular structure, which plays an essential role in controlling which genes are turned on in a given cell. However, a new study from MIT shows that in fact, this picture is not fully accurate. ...

Printing technique could vastly improve the environmental impact of digital displays

2025-10-17
Electrical engineers at Duke University have demonstrated the ability to print fully functional and recyclable electronics at sub-micrometer scales. The technique could impact the more than $150 billion electronic display industry and its environmental impact while providing a toehold for U.S. manufacturing to gain traction in a vital and quickly growing industry. The research appears October 17 in the journal Nature Electronics. “If we want to seriously increase U.S.-based manufacturing in areas dominated by global competitors, we need transformational technologies,” said Aaron ...

‘Skinny fat’ linked to silent artery damage, McMaster study reveals

2025-10-17
Hamilton, ON (October 17, 2025) – A new study led by researchers at McMaster University reveals that hidden fat deep inside the abdomen and liver may quietly damage arteries, even in people who appear healthy.   The findings, published in Communications Medicine on October 17, 2025, challenge the long-standing reliance on body-mass index (BMI) as a measure of obesity and offer fresh insight into how hidden fat contributes to heart disease.  Visceral fat (the kind that wraps ...

Sulfated yeast rises to the challenge facing rare earth metals

2025-10-17
Ever wonder what happens to those old, broken electronics after tossing them? How about how new ones are being produced despite dwindling resources? The seemingly endless supply of gadgets hides an increasingly critical problem, limited raw resources. Electronics, optical fibers, and superconducting materials heavily rely on rare earth metals, but such limited resources lack innovative recycling solutions. Various methods do exist for metal recovery, but technology with low environmental impact and costs is rising in demand. Fortunately, an answer may have been found in the common kitchen ingredient, baker’s yeast. ...

Global analysis reveals how biochar supercharges composting and cuts greenhouse gases

2025-10-17
A new study by researchers from Sichuan Agricultural University and international collaborators provides the most comprehensive evidence to date that biochar, a charcoal-like substance made from organic materials, plays a crucial role in faster, cleaner composting. By analyzing data from 125 studies across the world, the research team showed that adding biochar to composting systems significantly boosts compost quality while slashing harmful greenhouse gas emissions. The findings, published in Biochar X, could help scale up sustainable waste management and climate-friendly agriculture. “Biochar ...

Blocking a cellular switch could prevent lung-scarring disease

2025-10-17
Pulmonary fibrosis is a deadly disease in which the lungs become thickened and scarred, gradually losing their ability to deliver oxygen to the body. Now, scientists at UC San Francisco have identified a key cellular switch that drives this process — and found a way to block it in mice. The new therapy, which appears Oct. 15 in Journal of Clinical Investigation, works by preventing healthy lung cells from converting to a more harmful cell type. In mice with pulmonary fibrosis, the treatment ...

Planet formation depends on when it happens: UNLV model shows why

2025-10-17
A new study led by UNLV scientists sheds light on how planets, including Earth, formed in our galaxy – and why the life and death of nearby stars are an important piece of the puzzle.  In a paper published Sept. 23 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, researchers at UNLV in collaboration with scientists from the Open University of Israel for the first time modeled details about how the timing of planet formation in the history of the galaxy affects planetary composition and density.  “Materials ...

Deep sleep supports memory via brain fluid and neural rhythms

2025-10-17
Researchers led by Masako Tamaki at the RIKEN Center for Brain Science in Japan report a link between deep sleep and cerebrospinal fluid, the clear liquid that surrounds and supports the brain and spinal cord. Recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesof the United States of America, the study demonstrates how changes in cerebrospinal fluid signals during sleep—as measured by MRI—are time-locked to slow brain waves and other neural events. These findings offer a clue as to why stable sleep is important for normal brain ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel treatment combination improves progression-free survival in metastatic, estrogen-receptor-positive HER-2-negative breast cancer

ESMO 2025: Trial results show belzutifan shrinks rare neuroendocrine tumors and improves symptoms in patients

ESMO 2025: Dual targeted therapy shows promise in previously treated advanced kidney cancer patients

New generation of Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADCs) shows unprecedented promise in early-stage disease

Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet for October 2025

Three science and technology leaders elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

Jump Trading CSO Kevin Bowers elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

Former Inscripta CEO Sri Kosaraju elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

Citadel’s Jordan Chetty elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

McGill research flags Montreal snow dump, inactive landfills as major methane polluters

A lightweight and rapid bidirectional search algorithm

Eighty-five years of big tree history available in one place for the first time

MIT invents human brain model with six major cell types to enable personalized disease research, drug discovery

Health and economic air quality co-benefits of stringent climate policies

How immune cells deliver their deadly cargo

How the brain becomes a better listener: How focus enhances sound processing

Processed fats found in margarines unlikely to affect heart health

Scientists discover how leukemia cells evade treatment

Sandra Shi MD, MPH, named 2025 STAT Wunderkind

Treating liver disease with microscopic nanoparticles

Chemicals might be hitching a ride on nanoplastics to enter your skin

Pregnant patients with preexisting high cholesterol may have elevated CV risk

UC stroke experts discuss current and future use of AI tools in research and treatment

The Southern Ocean’s low-salinity water locked away CO2 for decades, but...

OHSU researchers develop functional eggs from human skin cells

Most users cannot identify AI bias, even in training data

Hurricane outages: Analysis details the where, and who, of increased future power cuts

Craters on surface of melanoma cells found to serve as sites for tumor killing

Research Spotlight: Mapping overlooked challenges in stroke recovery

Geographic and temporal patterns of screening for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer in the US

[Press-News.org] Post-traumatic vasospasm: An overlooked threat after brain injury
Enhanced detection methods and precise treatments could minimize brain damage caused by post-traumatic vasospasm in head trauma cases