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Quantum Control Electronics System Integration

A Clinical Test for a Newly Developed Direct Brain Cooling System for the Injured Brain and Pattern of Cortical Brainwaves in Cooling, Noncooling, and Dead Brain.

PubMed
Authors: Idris Z, Yee AS, Wan Hassan WMN, Hassan MH, Mohd Zain KA, Abdul Manaf A

Year

2022

Paper ID

954

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

176

Citations

9

Abstract

To ensure the direct delivery of therapeutic hypothermia at a selected constant temperature to the injured brain, a newly innovated direct brain cooling system was constructed. The practicality, effectiveness, and safety of this system were clinically tested in our initial series of 14 patients with severe head injuries. The patients were randomized into two groups: direct brain cooling at 32°C and the control group. All of them received intracranial pressure (ICP), focal brain oxygenation, brain temperature, and direct cortical brainwave monitoring. The direct brain cooling group did better in the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale at the time of discharge and at 6 months after trauma. This could be owing to a trend in the monitored parameters; reduction in ICP, increment in cerebral perfusion pressure, optimal brain redox regulation, near-normal brain temperature, and lessening of epileptic-like brainwave activities are likely the reasons for better outcomes in the cooling group. Finally, this study depicts interesting cortical brainwaves during a transition time from being alive to dead. It is believed that the demonstrated cortical brainwaves follow the principles of quantum physics.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Quantum Control Electronics & System Integration research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2022 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • To ensure the direct delivery of therapeutic hypothermia at a selected constant temperature to the injured brain, a newly innovated direct brain cooling system was constructed.

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