1. Relationship between Intracranial Pressure and Critical Closing Pressure in Patients with Neurotrauma
- Author
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Christos Pavlidis, Andreas Weyland, Carlo Schaller, Christof Thees, Andreas Hoeft, Annette Gass, and M. Scholz
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Middle Cerebral Artery ,Mean arterial pressure ,Adolescent ,Intracranial Pressure ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,Cerebral Ventricles ,Monitoring, Intraoperative ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Medicine ,Cerebral perfusion pressure ,Pressure gradient ,Intracranial pressure ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Blood flow ,Middle Aged ,Respiration, Artificial ,Critical closing pressure ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Blood pressure ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Anesthesia ,Radial Artery ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background The driving pressure gradient for cerebral perfusion is the difference between mean arterial pressure (MAP) and critical closing pressure (CCP = zero flow pressure). Therefore, determination of the difference between MAP and CCP should provide an appropriate monitoring of the effective cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP(eff)). Based on this concept, the authors compared conventional measurements of cerebral perfusion pressure by MAP and intracranial pressure (CPP(ICP)) with CPP(eff). Methods Simultaneous synchronized recordings of pressure waveforms of the radial artery and blood flow velocities of the middle cerebral artery were performed in 70 head trauma patients. CCP was calculated from pressure-flow velocity plots by linear extrapolation to zero flow. Results Intracranial pressure measured by intraventricular probes and CCP ranged from 3 to 71 and 4 to 70 mmHg, respectively. Linear correlation between ICP and CCP was r = 0.91. CPP(ICP) was 77 +/- 20 mmHg and did not differ from CPP(eff); linear correlation was r = 0.92. However, limits of agreement were only +/- 16.2 mmHg. Therefore, in 51.4% of the patients, CPP(ICP) overestimated CPP(eff) by 19.8 mmHg at most. Conclusion Assuming that CPP(eff) (MAP - CCP) takes into account more determinants of cerebral downstream pressure, in individual cases, the actual gold standard of CPP determination (MAP - ICP) might overestimate the CPP(eff) of therapeutic significance.
- Published
- 2002
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