Cardiac-gated intracranial elastance in a swine model of raised intracranial pressure: a novel method to assess intracranial pressure-volume dynamics.
cardiac-gated elastance
cerebral edema
intracranial balloon pump
intracranial pressure
swine model
traumatic brain injury
Journal
Journal of neurosurgery
ISSN: 1933-0693
Titre abrégé: J Neurosurg
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0253357
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
05 Jun 2020
05 Jun 2020
Historique:
received:
03
12
2019
accepted:
31
03
2020
pubmed:
6
6
2020
medline:
10
8
2021
entrez:
6
6
2020
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Previous studies have demonstrated the importance of intracranial elastance; however, methodological difficulties have limited widespread clinical use. Measuring elastance may offer potential benefit in helping to identify patients at risk for untoward intracranial pressure (ICP) elevation from small rises in intracranial volume. The authors sought to develop an easily used method that accounts for the changing ICP that occurs over a cardiac cycle and to assess this method in a large-animal model over a broad range of ICPs. The authors used their previously described cardiac-gated intracranial balloon pump and swine model of cerebral edema. In the present experiment they measured elastance at 4 points along the cardiac cycle-early systole, peak systole, mid-diastole, and end diastole-by using rapid balloon inflation to 1 ml over an ICP range of 10-30 mm Hg. The authors studied 7 swine with increasing cerebral edema. Intracranial elastance rose progressively with increasing ICP. Peak-systolic and end-diastolic elastance demonstrated the most consistent rise in elastance as ICP increased. Cardiac-gated elastance measurements had markedly lower variance within swine compared with non-cardiac-gated measures. The slope of the ICP-elastance curve differed between swine. At ICP between 20 and 25 mm Hg, elastance varied between 8.7 and 15.8 mm Hg/ml, indicating that ICP alone cannot accurately predict intracranial elastance. Measuring intracranial elastance in a cardiac-gated manner is feasible and may offer an improved precision of measure. The authors' preliminary data suggest that because elastance values may vary at similar ICP levels, ICP alone may not necessarily best reflect the state of intracranial volume reserve capacity. Paired ICP-elastance measurements may offer benefit as an adjunct "early warning monitor" alerting to the risk of untoward ICP elevation in brain-injured patients that is induced by small increases in intracranial volume.
Identifiants
pubmed: 32503002
doi: 10.3171/2020.3.JNS193262
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
1650-1657Commentaires et corrections
Type : CommentIn