Observations on the Cerebral Effects of Refractory Intracranial Hypertension After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
Authors
Smielewski, Peter
Adams, Hadie
Cardim, Danilo
Liu, Xiuyun
Fedriga, Marta
Hutchinson, Peter
Menon, David K.
Czosnyka, Marek
Publication Date
2019-06-25Journal Title
Neurocritical Care
ISSN
1541-6933
Publisher
Springer US
Volume
32
Issue
2
Pages
437-447
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Donnelly, J., Smielewski, P., Adams, H., Zeiler, F. A., Cardim, D., Liu, X., Fedriga, M., et al. (2019). Observations on the Cerebral Effects of Refractory Intracranial Hypertension After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury. Neurocritical Care, 32 (2), 437-447. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-019-00748-x
Description
Funder: Woolf Fisher Trust
Abstract
Abstract: Background: Raised intracranial pressure (ICP) is a prominent cause of morbidity and mortality after severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, in the clinical setting, little is known about the cerebral physiological response to severe and prolonged increases in ICP. Methods: Thirty-three severe TBI patients from a single center who developed severe refractory intracranial hypertension (ICP > 40 mm Hg for longer than 1 h) with ICP, arterial blood pressure, and brain tissue oxygenation (PBTO2) monitoring (subcohort, n = 9) were selected for retrospective review. Secondary parameters reflecting autoregulation (including pressure reactivity index—PRx, which was available in 24 cases), cerebrospinal compensatory reserve (RAP), and ICP pulse amplitude were calculated. Results: PRx deteriorated from 0.06 ± 0.26 a.u. at baseline levels of ICP to 0.57 ± 0.24 a.u. (p < 0.0001) at high levels of ICP (> 50 mm Hg). In 4 cases, PRx was impaired (> 0.25 a.u.) before ICP was raised above 25 mm Hg. Concurrently, PBTO2 decreased from 27.3 ± 7.32 mm Hg at baseline ICP to 12.68 ± 7.09 mm Hg at high levels of ICP (p < 0.001). The pulse amplitude of the ICP waveform increased with increasing ICP but showed an ‘upper breakpoint’—whereby further increases in ICP lead to decreases in pulse amplitude—in 6 out of the 33 patients. Discussion: Severe intracranial hypertension after TBI leads to decreased brain oxygenation, impaired pressure reactivity, and changes in the pulse amplitude of ICP. Impaired pressure reactivity may denote increased risk of developing refractory intracranial hypertension in some patients.
Keywords
Original Work, Traumatic brain injury, Intracranial pressure, Cerebral hemodynamics, Autoregulation, Cerebral oxygenation, Cerebral perfusion pressure, Intracranial hypertension
Identifiers
s12028-019-00748-x, 748
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-019-00748-x
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/307189
Rights
Licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/