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Intracranial compliance monitoring using pulse shape index in traumatic brain injury: relation to cerebral physiology and clinical outcome

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

BackgroundThe intracranial pressure (ICP) pulse waveform reflects intracranial compliance. The pulse shape index (PSI), an artificial intelligence (AI)-based metric ranging from 1 (normal) to 4 (disturbed), quantifies morphological waveform pathologies. Early findings in smaller cohorts indicate that elevated PSI is associated with mass lesions, aging, higher ICP, and worse outcome. This study examined how PSI relates to other markers of intracranial compliance, the risk of ICP crisis, and clinical outcome in a large traumatic brain injury (TBI) cohort.MethodsThis retrospective study included 321 TBI patients with ≥ 12 h of ICP/PSI monitoring. PSI was analysed in relation to ICP, ICP pulse amplitude (AmpICP), the moving correlation coefficient between mean ICP and ICP amplitude (RAP index), and arterial blood pressure (ABP) using generalised additive models (GAMs). Linear mixed-effects models assessed whether PSI during preceding hours predicted later ICP elevations (e.g., ICP > 20/22 mmHg). The prognostic value of PSI was tested using univariable Mann–Whitney U test and multivariable (after adjustment for age, Glasgow Coma Scale, ICP, CPP, and PRx) logistic regression for mortality (Glasgow Outcome Scale = 1) and favourable outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale = 4–5).ResultsPSI increased with higher ICP, AmpICP, RAP, and ABP. PSI during the preceding hour predicted increased ICP burden above 20 mmHg (marginal R2 ~30%). PSI was lower in survivors and in patients with favourable outcomes. However, in multivariable logistic regressions, PSI was not independently associated with mortality or favourable outcome.ConclusionsPSI was linked to established indicators of intracranial compliance and provided early warning of impending intracranial hypertension. While PSI showed univariable associations with outcome, these did not remain in multivariable models. Retrospectively, PSI does not appear to have independent prognostic value, but rather a complementary value. Prospectively, it may serve as a dynamic marker of deteriorating intracranial compliance and an early signal for future ICP crisis.

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Acknowledgements: We express our gratitude to the personnel at the neurocritical care unit, Addenbrooke’s Hospital (Cambridge, UK), for meticulous patient care and for their assistance with our data collection efforts.


Publication status: Published


Funder: Uppsala University

Journal Title

Critical Care

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1364-8535
1364-8535

Volume Title

30

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/