News Release

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

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Journal of Intensive Medicine

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.

 

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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.


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