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Relationship Between Measures of Cerebrovascular Reactivity and Intracranial Lesion Progression in Acute TBI Patients: an Exploratory Analysis.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Zeiler, Frederick A 
Whitehouse, Daniel P 
Das, Tilak 
Ercole, Ari 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Failure of cerebral autoregulation and progression of intracranial lesion have both been shown to contribute to poor outcome in patients with acute traumatic brain injury (TBI), but the interplay between the two phenomena has not been investigated. Preliminary evidence leads us to hypothesize that brain tissue adjacent to primary injury foci may be more vulnerable to large fluctuations in blood flow in the absence of intact autoregulatory mechanisms. The goal of this study was therefore to assess the influence of cerebrovascular reactivity measures on radiological lesion expansion in a cohort of patients with acute TBI. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort analysis on 50 TBI patients who had undergone high-frequency multimodal intracranial monitoring and for which at least two brain computed tomography (CT) scans had been performed in the acute phase of injury. We first performed univariate analyses on the full cohort to identify non-neurophysiological factors (i.e., initial lesion volume, timing of scan, coagulopathy) associated with traumatic lesion growth in this population. In a subset analysis of 23 patients who had intracranial recording data covering the period between the initial and repeat CT scan, we then correlated changes in serial volumetric lesion measurements with cerebrovascular reactivity metrics derived from the pressure reactivity index (PRx), pulse amplitude index (PAx), and RAC (correlation coefficient between the pulse amplitude of intracranial pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure). Using multivariate methods, these results were subsequently adjusted for the non-neurophysiological confounders identified in the univariate analyses. RESULTS: We observed significant positive linear associations between the degree of cerebrovascular reactivity impairment and progression of pericontusional edema. The strongest correlations were observed between edema progression and the following indices of cerebrovascular reactivity between sequential scans: % time PRx > 0.25 (r = 0.69, p = 0.002) and % time PAx > 0.25 (r = 0.64, p = 0.006). These associations remained significant after adjusting for initial lesion volume and mean cerebral perfusion pressure. In contrast, progression of the hemorrhagic core and extra-axial hemorrhage volume did not appear to be strongly influenced by autoregulatory status. CONCLUSIONS: Our preliminary findings suggest a possible link between autoregulatory failure and traumatic edema progression, which warrants re-evaluation in larger-scale prospective studies.

Description

Keywords

Neurophysiological monitoring, Traumatic brain injury, Traumatic intracranial hemorrhage, Adult, Arterial Pressure, Brain Contusion, Brain Edema, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Disease Progression, Female, Glasgow Coma Scale, Glasgow Outcome Scale, Homeostasis, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Intracranial Hemorrhage, Traumatic, Intracranial Pressure, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Young Adult

Journal Title

Neurocrit Care

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1541-6933
1556-0961

Volume Title

32

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Academy of Medical Sciences (unknown)
Medical Research Council (G0601025)