Skip to main content
Erschienen in: Acta Neurochirurgica 10/2016

Open Access 27.08.2016 | Review Article - Neurosurgical Techniques

The best marker for guiding the clinical management of patients with raised intracranial pressure—the RAP index or the mean pulse amplitude?

verfasst von: Allan Hall, Roddy O’Kane

Erschienen in: Acta Neurochirurgica | Ausgabe 10/2016

Abstract

Raised intracranial pressure is a common problem in a variety of neurosurgical conditions including traumatic brain injury, hydrocephalus and intracranial haemorrhage. The clinical management of these patients is guided by a variety of haemodynamic, biochemical and clinical factors. However to date there is no single parameter that is used to guide clinical management of patients with raised intracranial pressure (ICP). However, the role of ICP indices, specifically the mean pulse amplitude (AMP) and RAP index [correlation coefficient (R) between AMP amplitude (A) and mean ICP pressure (P); index of compensatory reserve], as an indicator of true ICP has been investigated. Whilst the RAP index has been used both as a descriptor of neurological deterioration in TBI patients and as a way of characterising the compensatory reserve in hydrocephalus, more recent studies have highlighted the limitation of the RAP index due to the influence that baseline effect errors have on the mean ICP, which is used in the calculation of the RAP index. These studies have suggested that the ICP mean pulse amplitude may be a more accurate marker of true intracranial pressure due to the fact that it is uninfluenced by the mean ICP and, therefore, the AMP may be a more reliable marker than the RAP index for guiding the clinical management of patients with raised ICP. Although further investigation needs to be undertaken in order to fully assess the role of ICP indices in guiding the clinical management of patients with raised ICP, the studies undertaken to date provide an insight into the potential role of ICP indices to treat raised ICP proactively rather than reactively and therefore help prevent or minimise secondary brain injury.
Hinweise

Comments

Intracranial pressure is a fundamental signal informing about cerebral homeostasis in the majority of acute and chronic neurological diseases. In neurocritical care it should be interpreted in conjunction with other signals as a part of multimodal brain monitoring. In hydrocephalus or idiopathic intracranial hypertension, ICP is frequently interpreted alone, and additional information may be derived from its pulse waveform, respiratory, composition of slow waves (more or less periodical frequencies slower than 0.05 Hz), pathological plateau or ‘hyperaemic’ elevations. The pulse waveform of ICP has a long list of great publications such as Avezaat and Ejindhoven’s PhD thesis (1), Portnoy’s arterial pulse to ICP pulse transmission models (2) or the morphological description from the Los Angeles group animated by Xiao Hu (3) and many others. The amplitude of the ICP pulse (AMP) is an effect of pulsation of arterial blood inside compliant cerebral arteries. AMP is roughly proportional to the magnitude of its source (i.e. the amplitude of arterial blood pulsations) and a ratio of compartmental compliances of the cerebral arterial bed and cerebrospinal fluid space. In individual cases the AMP usually increases when the mean ICP increases (4), but only when changes in the mean ICP are not solely procured by changes of central venous pressure (like in a change of body position, but also the Queckenstedt test) or the intracranial pressure-volume curve is very flat (like after craniectomy). In turn, the RAP is a mathematical index derived from changes in the ICP and AMP. As such, it is secondary to the observed changes in the ICP and AMP. Because of the proposed [and verified by so many neuroscientists (5)] linear-exponential shape of the pressure-volume characteristic, it may inform us whether the current working point is on the flat (or linear) part of the curve or exponential (non-linear). In the first case the RAP is close to 0 (signifying the compensatory reserve is good) and in the second close to +1 (the compensatory reserve is exhausted). At very high ICPs, where the pressure-volume curve deflects to the right (5) and decreases its slope (which denotes a critical ICP above which the arterial bed starts to collapse, i.e. the critical closing pressure reaches diastolic blood pressure), the RAP becomes negative.
It is difficult to say which of the two descriptors, AMP or RAP, is more useful. I am sure that both parameters should be analysed in conjunction. High AMP is not always associated with RAP close to +1. And RAP around 0 is not always associated with low AMP. AMP says more about cerebrovascular phenomena associated with arterial blood transport, and RAP characterises better pressure-volume compensatory reserve. Both may be useful, but RAP cannot be evaluated without proper detection of AMP. And AMP equal to 0 may mean that the patient died, his cerebrospinal compliance is abnormally high, or the ICP transducer is broken. References: 1. Avezaat CJJ, van Eijndhoven JHM: Cerebrospinal pulse pressure and craniospinal dynamics. Thesis. A Jongbloed and Zoon Publishers, The Hague,1984. 2. Portnoy HD, Chopp M, Branch C, Shannon M: Cerebrospinal fluid pulse waveform as an indicator of cerebral autoregulation. J. Neurosurg 56: 666-678, 1982.3. Hu X, Glenn T, Scalzo F, Bergsneider M, Sarkiss C, Martin N, Vespa P. Intracranial pressure pulse morphological features improved detection of decreased cerebral blood flow. Physiol Meas. 2010 May;31(5):679-95.4. Brawanski A, Meixensberger J, Zophel R, Ulrich W: The PA/ICP relationship in head injured patients: is there only one relationship? in JT Hoff, AL Betz (eds): ICP VII. Springer Verlag 1989, p 634-636.5. Lofgren J, von Essen C, Zwetnow NN: The pressure-volume curve of the cerebrospinal fluid space in dogs. Acta Neurol Scand 1973; 49:557-574
Marek Czosnyka
Cambridge UK
1. Avezaat CJJ, van Eijndhoven JHM : Cerebrospinal Pulse Pressure and Craniospinal Dynamics. Thesis. A Jongbloed and Zoon Publishers, The Hague,1984.
2. Portnoy HD, Chopp M, Branch C, Shannon M: Cerebrospinal fluid pulse waveform as an indicator of cerebral autoregulation. J. Neurosurg 56: 666-678, 1982.
3. Hu X, Glenn T, Scalzo F, Bergsneider M, Sarkiss C, Martin N, Vespa P. Intracranial pressure pulse morphological features improved detection of decreased cerebral blood flow. Physiol Meas. 2010 May;31(5):679-95.
4. Brawanski A, Meixensberger J, Zophel R, Ulrich W: The PA/ICP relationship in head injured patients: is there only one relationship ? in JT Hoff, AL Betz (eds): ICP VII. Springer Verlag 1989, p 634-636.
5. Lofgren J, von Essen C, Zwetnow NN: The pressure-volume curve of the cerebrospinal fluid space in dogs. Acta Neurol Scand1973; 49:557-574

Introduction

The accurate measurement of dynamic intracranial pressure is complex. Although the measurement of ICP is an important factor in determining both the clinical management and outcome of patients with several neurosurgical conditions, recent studies have looked at the use of measuring the compensatory reserve as a possible predictor of clinical outcome and how it could be used to guide clinical management. Czosnyka et al. designed a coefficient between the mean intracranial pressure and the ICP mean pulse amplitude, the RAP index, as a potential descriptor of neurological deterioration in traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients [1]. Since this publication it has also been used to characterise the compensatory reserve in patients with hydrocephalus [2]. More recent studies have researched the use of the RAP index as a possible marker to guide clinical management in patients with raised ICP. This has included analysing the effects of baseline effect errors on both the RAP index as well as the ICP wave parameters, including the ICP mean pulse amplitude (AMP) [3, 4]. These studies concluded that baseline effect errors may hinder the use of the RAP index as a marker to guide clinical management due to their influential effect on the mean ICP, which is one of two factors used to calculate the RAP index. Other studies have shown that the AMP, as opposed to the RAP index, is refractory to these baseline errors and may provide a more accurate marker to guide clinical management, as well as its potential to predict mortality in certain neurosurgical events including traumatic brain injury [5].
This review will give an overview of intracranial pressure including its monitoring and examine the evidence from previous studies regarding the potential role of both the RAP index and the AMP as a marker to guide clinical management.

Intracranial pressure

Physiology

Intracranial pressure (ICP) is derived from the circulatory dynamics of the CSF and cerebral blood flow that occur within the rigid intracranial compartment [6]. This relationship forms the ICP waveform, which consists of a cardiac component, which involves three peaks, a respiratory component, which is a reflection of the respiratory cycle on cerebral venous blood flow, and slow vasogenic waves of ICP, secondary to autoregulation-derived cyclic fluctuations of arterial blood volume (Fig. 1). ICP is affected by many factors both within and outside of the intracranial compartment.
Under normal circumstances ICP is kept within a certain range primarily with cerebral auto-regulation, which is itself dependent on cerebrovascular reactivity. The fact that true ICP is influenced by many factors and has both inter- and intra-patient variability makes accurate measurement of true ICP difficult. For example, the value of ICP is affected by age, body posture, time of day as well as the clinical condition of the patient. However a normal range of ICP has been established in order to address the multi-variant nature of ICP, as well as general interventional thresholds for ICP in different neurosurgical conditions.
Intracranial factors that can affect ICP can be broadly categorised into three main intracranial areas: disturbances in the dynamics of CSF; the expansion of intracranial tissue itself; the expansion of blood volume (Fig. 2). Disturbances within these intracranial areas can be caused by several factors including disturbances in the normal vascular architecture (resulting in either haemorrhage or mass effect), infection, malignancy (including metastasis) and trauma.
Extra-cranial factors are diverse and more difficult to manage from a neurosurgical point of view. For example, both the intra-thoracic compartment and, to a lesser extent, the intra-abdominal compartment influence ICP, in both the acute and chronic setting. In particular, the respiratory system plays a crucial role in the cerebral circulatory dynamics. This is evident by the role of ventilation to help reduce the vasodilatory effects of CO2 in patients with TBI [7, 8].

Measurement and monitoring

Although understanding the homeostasis of ICP and its relationship to intracranial events is vital, the accurate measurement of true ICP is crucial in understanding its role in abnormal intracranial physiology and its effect on clinical outcome.
Measuring ICP is conventionally undertaken using either an intra-parenchymal or intra-ventricular transducer. It has been hypothesised that measuring intracranial pressure from a single source is itself a source of inaccuracy due to the complex three-dimensional pressure gradients that are established as a result of the complex intracranial architecture and physiology (Fig. 3). Studies have shown there is regional cerebral homeostasis as a result of regional effects on vasculature from local factors including metabolic and neural factors [9]. This local effect on regional vasculature is driven by cellular events ranging from increased production of waste products from cellular metabolism to changes in local neuronal activity. The reactivity of cerebral blood flow (CBF) to metabolic demand is not only rapid but is not always proportional [9]. This regional homeostatic effect has the potential to be another factor that could affect the true ICP values when measuring the ICP from a single source. However due to the invasive nature of ICP monitoring, accurately measuring pan-cranial ICP using the current invasive methods would be impractical.
Non-invasive methods of monitoring ICP have been assessed, including MRI and ultrasonography [10]. In particular the use of ultrasonography to measure optic nerve sheath diameter to assess dynamic changes in ICP has shown promising results [11]. Although no method has currently been found to be a suitable substitute for the more invasive method of ICP monitoring [12], further study into its use as a method of monitoring ICP from a variety of intracranial points would be useful, in particular, the potential role of using imaging techniques including fMRI to assess cerebral function and thereby establish the full relationship between raised ICP and changes in cerebral function. However the heterogeneity of cerebral vascular reactivity caused by ischaemia-induced impairment of cerebrovascular dynamics, including neurovascular coupling, could potentially hinder the use of fMRI in accurately assessing cerebral function in conditions that disrupt the blood-brain barrier such as in TBI.

Intracranial pressure indices

The RAP index

Czosnyka et al. designed an index that is a correlation coefficient between the mean ICP and the ICP mean wave amplitude (AMP)—the RAP index [correlation coefficient (R) between AMP amplitude (A) and mean pressure (P); index of compensatory reserve]. This was first introduced as a potential descriptor for neurological deterioration in TBI patients. It was subsequently used to characterise the pressure-volume compensatory reserve in patients with hydrocephalus. The RAP index has been shown to be a reliable measure of the compensatory reserve; however in more chronic states the cerebrospinal elasticity coefficient (E1) and AMP have been shown to express the compensatory reserve better [1316]. This is due to the fact that raised ICP in chronic states, such as hydrocephalus and intracranial hypertension, is due to increased cerebral venous outflow or increased resistance to CSF outflow rather than the exhaustion of the cerebrospinal compensatory reserve. The RAP index has also been shown to be an accurate measure of intracranial compliance [17]. In addition, the RAP index has been used to assess the use of extra-ventricular devices to investigate the role of cerebral auto-regulation disturbances in aneurysmal subarachnoid patients [18].
The numerical value of the RAP index can range from +1 to -1 (Fig. 4). An RAP value of 0 is interpreted as lack of synchronisation between the changes in AMP and mean ICP. In terms of the pressure-volume relationship, an increase in intracranial volume does not result in a rise in ICP.
When the RAP index rises to +1, there is synchronisation between the rise in AMP and the rise in ICP. In terms of the pressure-volume relationship, a small rise in intracranial volume results in a larger rise in ICP.
If the ICP continues to rise, the RAP index value becomes -1. At this point the AMP has an inverse relationship to ICP—the AMP decreases as the ICP continues to rise. At this stage the compensatory reserve is exhausted and cerebral auto-regulation collapses. It is at this point that cerebral ischaemia- induced irreversible brain damage will likely occur and, ultimately, brain herniation. Note however that cerebral ischaemia will rise in a gradient fashion as the ICP continues to rise.
More recent studies have researched the potential role of the RAP index as a marker to guide clinical management [2, 19, 20]. However these studies found that the use of RAP as a potential marker to guide clinical management may be hindered by baseline effect errors. In particular it was found that baseline effect errors had a significant influence on the mean ICP as to render it an inaccurate reflection of the true ICP. This in turn influences the RAP index, which is calculated by correlating slow fluctuations of ICP and pulse amplitude.

ICP mean pulse amplitude (AMP)

The ICP mean pulse amplitude relates to the pressure fluctuations of the ICP during the cardiac cycle. The AMP increases as the ICP rises; however once the critical ICP has been reached there will be subsequent derangement of cerebrovascular reactivity and AMP will decrease.
More studies are beginning to research the use of AMP both as a more accurate marker of the true ICP, in place of the mean ICP, as well as a tool to help guide the clinical management of patients [21, 22]. The influence that baseline effect errors have been shown to have on the mean ICP has raised questions as to how accurately the mean ICP value reflects the true underlying ICP. In particular it has been shown that AMP can make a useful contribution to the diagnosis of hydrocephalus as well as predict a positive outcome after shunt insertion [23]. However its use as a single parameter to guide clinical management has not yet been justified.
Although it has been demonstrated that AMP is refractory to baseline effect errors, further study into what other factors could potentially affect AMP, and therefore its usefulness in clinical management, must be investigated. This includes investigating the extent to which any factor influences AMP across the different pathological conditions. For example, studies have shown that AMP is more dependent on pulse changes in arterial blood volume in patients with TBI than in those with normal pressure hydrocephalus [24].
Further studies have assessed the AMP in relation to clinical outcome and have shown that a lower AMP is associated with a better outcome following TBI [25] and surgery [26].
One proposed advantage of using AMP instead of the RAP index is its ability to reflect the dynamic nature of true ICP without influences from static values, which have the potential to be affected by other dynamic factors such as baseline effect errors. However one limitation of using the AMP is the ability of researchers to accurately analyse the multi-variant and dynamic nature of the ICP waveform in an objective way. Studies have looked at more sophisticated algorithms of objectively analysing ICP wave parameters, including AMP, with a degree of success.
For example, it has been shown that the time domain method is superior to the frequency domain method for ICP waveform analysis since the frequency domain method can underestimate the AMP in the presence of heart rate variability or if the waveform has a high harmonic distortion [27]. Holm et al. [27] showed that the difference in the AMP calculated from these two methods was significant, with a difference of ≥2.0 mmHg in more than half of the 50,978 6-s time windows analysed. Furthermore, this difference will also affect the RAP index since the AMP is one of its components. Therefore, it is important that a standard method of analysis for the AMP is used in order to achieve robust results that can be accurately interpreted, which is important if both the RAP index and AMP are to be used to guide clinical management.
More recent studies have used more sophisticated algorithms to analyse the individual ICP waveform peaks (P1, P2, P3) with a high degree of accuracy.
However the successful clinical use of such algorithms for accurate, objective analysis of Lundberg waves, in particular B waves, has still to be proven [28, 29]. The proactive treatment of raised ICP instead of reactive treatment is one potential area where ICP waveform parameters, including AMP, could prove useful [3032].

Baseline effect errors

Baseline effect errors (BEEs) are spontaneous shifts in baseline pressure that occur during continuous ICP monitoring. They were first described by Eide in 2006 [33] when monitoring ICP simultaneously from two separate sensors in which there was a marked difference in mean ICP, combined with close to identical ICP waveform components such as AMP.
Baseline effect errors can be caused by a variety of factors ranging from all components of the ICP monitoring system, including the sensor, cable, display and transducer, to imperfect fluid connection caused by debris or air bubbles.
In relation to ICP indices, this is very important since any ICP index that includes mean ICP in its component will be affected, including the RAP index. However since the AMP is included in the RAP index, the effect of BEE is less pronounced in the RAP index than in the mean ICP. Therefore, any ICP index that is solely based on static pressure measurements can expect to be affected by BEE.
The ability of baseline effect errors to influence the value of the RAP index, and therefore the true nature of the patients underlying intracranial compensatory reserve, has the potential to affect clinical management. It has been shown that significant differences in the RAP index correspond to the occurence of BEEs and that the differences are of a magnitude that could affect patient management [3]. For example, an inaccurate RAP index could give the clinician a false reflection of the patient’s underlying intracranial physiological state and therefore instigate an erroneous change in their management that could range from altering doses of certain medications to undertaking inappropriate surgical intervention.
Baseline effect errors also have the potential to affect cerebral perfusion pressure, through the effect it has on intracranial pressure (since CPP is equal to mean arterial pressure minus intracranial pressure). For example, if BEEs are caused by an imperfect fluid connection as a result of debris or air bubbles, this could result in a fall in CPP if the ICP rises beyond the limits of cerebral auto-regulation.

Current guidance in the clinical management of raised ICP

Raised ICP is defined as a sustained ICP of greater than 20 mmHg. However the thresholds for management depend, in part, on the underlying cause. At present there is no single parameter that has been proven to be the best marker to guide the clinical management of raised ICP. Due to the multi-variant nature of ICP between conditions and between patients it is doubtful whether it is possible to have one single parameter that can successfully guide the clinical management. The current treatment options for raised ICP range from initial medical management involving general physiological homeostasis to management, which involves more radical interventions including endotracheal intubation, barbiturate coma, and surgical evacuation or decompression. The ultimate goal of treating raised ICP is to prevent or minimise secondary brain injury by restoring intracranial homeostasis in order to reach optimum cerebral function.

Treatment options

General physiological homeostasis

General physiological homeostasis involves controlling several parameters, which include blood pressure, serum osmolarity, temperature and blood glucose, as well as maintaining adequate partial arterial pressures of oxygen.
Blood pressure control has an important role in the treatment of raised ICP; however the exact treatment thresholds required to achieve optimum cerebral function in the setting of raised ICP remains ambiguous. This is in part due to the fact that patients with raised ICP often have several contributing factors. An important consideration in the control of a patient’s blood pressure within the context of raised ICP is the fine balance required between under-treatment of hypertension, and therefore increasing the possibility of haemorrhage or mass effect, and over-treatment of hypertension, and thus increasing the risk of ischaemia-induced damage to cerebral function. One therapy that aims to reduced the risk of ischaemia-induced cerebral damage is cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP)-guided therapy. This therapy aims to maintain CPP greater than 70 mmHg in order to minimise ischaemia, which is induced by compensatory cerebral vasodilation [3436]. However CPP-guided therapy is not conclusive as it has been shown that this approach can cause a rise in ICP [37].
Another approach used to control blood pressure is the “Lund Protocol” in which a disruption of the blood-brain barrier is assumed. This places emphasis on reducing the hydrostatic forces whilst increasing the osmotic forces to maintain fluid within the intravascular compartment and thus prevent vasogenic oedema [38].
In addition to ensuring adequate CPP, oxygen levels must be adequately maintained, particularly in patients who have suffered TBI or intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) in which the presence of pericapillary oedema may reduce the diffusion ability of oxygen to cross the blood-brain barrier.
Another important therapeutic target in raised ICP is glycaemic control. It has been shown in several studies that hyperglycaemia increases both the morbidity and mortality in patients with several neurological conditions including ICH and traumatic brain injury (TBI) [3942, 43, 44]. Several of the underlying reasons for this increase in morbidity and mortality are the widespread detrimental effect that hyperglycaemia has on the cardiovascular system. However it has also been shown that hyperglycaemia causes a rise in ICP [45]. In particular, the breakdown of the blood-brain barrier that occurs in TBI patients results in the influx of glucose into the cerebral tissue thereby causing an increase in oedema through osmosis.
Minimising pyrexic episodes in patients with raised ICP is very important as an increase in temperature results in a rise in the cerebral metabolic rate, which can precipitate ischaemia directly, or indirectly through oedema. This is evident by studies that have shown, through experimental models of brain injury, the detrimental effect fever has on clinical outcome [46, 47]. Furthermore, the incidence of fever in patients who suffer basal ganglionic and lobar ICH, particularly ventricular haemorrhage, is high. Fever is also an independent predictor of poor clinical outcome after severe head injury. Therefore aggressive treatment of fever in patients with raised ICP is encouraged.

Head of bed elevation

Elevation of the head to 30° improves jugular venous outflow and reduces ICP. However caution must be used in patients who are hypovolemic as elevation in these patients could result in a fall in CPP, which could have significant effects on cerebral function, depending on the volume and duration of the drop in CPP.

Analgesia and sedation

Analgesia is important in order to minimise the potential harmful effect on ICP. Sedation may be used in order to appropriately ventilate patients who are unable to achieve adequate ventilation on their own. However this must be titrated with care in order to minimise the detrimental effect it may have on the clinician’s ability to clinically evaluate the patient.

Neuromuscular blockage

Patients who fail to respond to analgesia and sedation, and who still have intracranial hypertension, may benefit from neuromuscular blockade as seizure activity causes a rise in intra-thoracic pressure, which can obstruct cerebral venous outflow resulting in an increase in ICP. One of the drawbacks of this therapy is the masking of seizure activity.

Osmotic agents

One of the most important physiological properties that must be carefully balanced in patients with raised ICP is serum osmolarity. Both mannitol and hypertonic sodium chloride are the most common agents used.
Mannitol acts through two mechanisms. First, it increases intravascular volume and results in a reduction in blood viscosity. The intravascular volume expansion results in an increase in cardiac pre-load and thus an increase in CPP. Through cerebral auto-regulation, compensatory cerebral vasoconstriction occurs, which reduces the ICP. Second, mannitol draws water from the extracellular cerebral tissue into the plasma, thereby reducing cerebral oedema. However if the blood-brain barrier is disrupted, care must be taken to avoid worsening any cerebral oedema.
Hypertonic saline (HTS) can be used because of its osmotic effects as a result of its hypertonicity compared to extracellular cerebral tissue. However hypertonic saline also has haemodynamic, vaso-regulatory, immunological and neurochemical effects [48]. One recent study looked at the difference in cumulative and daily ICP burdens after severe traumatic brain injury between hypertonic saline and mannitol and found that HTS was more effective than mannitol when given as a bolus therapy. However the 2-week mortality rates between the two were not statistically different [49].

Steroids

The use of steroids in raised ICP is limited to treat vasogenic oedema where the underlying cause is primary and metastatic tumours. Steroids have shown no benefit in TBI or spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage [50, 51].
In some studies they have been shown to have a detrimental effect [52, 53].
Steroids can also be used in CNS infection; however care should be taken in intracerebral abscesses as they can retard the encapsulation process, worsen necrosis and reduce the permeability of antibiotics.

Hyperventilation

The use of CO2 influence on cerebral auto-regulation provides one of the most effective methods for rapidly lowering ICP. This is achieved through ventilation, which allows the clinician to lower CO2 levels and induce compensatory cerebral vasoconstriction and thus reduce the ICP. One caveat to using this property of CO2 is the ability of the extracellular space of the brain to accommodate the associated changes in pH, and thus once CO2 levels begin to normalise a compensatory increase in ICP can occur. Therefore the main limitation of hyperventilation is its short therapeutic duration.

CSF drainage

CSF drainage is an effective method of lowering ICP in patients who have an intraventricular catheter to monitor ICP [31]. This is achieved by drainage of small amounts of CSF for short periods of time in response to elevations in the ICP. The main risks associated with ventriculostomy are infection and haemorrhage, with the incidence of bacterial meningitis varying between 6 % and 22 % [54, 55, 56].

Barbiturate coma

The use of barbiturates to induce a coma state is only suitable for refractory raised ICP. Barbiturates work by reducing the cerebral metabolic activity and thus reduce cerebral blood flow. However there are several potential side effects of this therapy including hypotension [57, 58]. Therefore careful monitoring of the patient’s haemodynamic state is vital.

Surgery

The role of decompressive craniotomy in the presence of a compressive pathology (such as subdural haematoma) is well documented. However its role in the absence of a compressive pathology is less well documented.
A number of studies, including the International Surgical Trial in Intracerebral Haemorrhage (STICH) trial, showed no real benefit in treating supra-tentorial ICH with craniotomy. Of those who were treated, a higher Glasgow Coma Scale (≥9) and a clot within 1 cm of the surface were associated with a 29 % relative benefit in functional outcome when compared with medical management [5961]. Furthermore surgical intervention can provide more effective management in certain conditions such as diffuse, severe TBI and middle cerebral artery infarction than medical management [62].
However these studies did not include patients where the haemorrhage was located in the cerebellum. Further studies that did look at cerebellar ICH provided the conclusion that large cerebellar haemorrhages that either compress the brain stem or obstruct the fourth ventricle should be surgically removed as soon as possible [63, 6469].
With regards to the timings of when surgery should be performed, there is no clear guidance on this [70]. The most supportive evidence is for operative removal within 12 h; however this is not conclusive.
Furthermore, bifrontal decompressive craniectomy in post-traumatic intracranial hypertension has been associated with significant reductions in AMP and has increased the compensatory reserve and therefore led to an improvement in the patient’s RAP index. [71] Although decompressive craniectomy has been reported to be beneficial in a number of conditions there is currently insufficient evidence to prove that it has the potential to improve outcome, despite showing benefits under certain conditions [72, 73].

The role of the RAP index and AMP in future clinical management

ICP indices were introduced to help improve the diagnostic value of ICP. One of the main reasons for using ICP indices in patients with raised ICP is to allow clinicians to treat raised ICP proactively rather than reactively. The RAP index has already been used as a descriptor of neurological deterioration in TBI patients. However it has yet to be used to guide clinical management. One of the main reasons the RAP index may not be a suitable marker to guide clinical management is its susceptibility to baseline effect errors. Given the dynamic nature of ICP in conjunction with the varying causes responsible for baseline pressure effects, it is little surprise that the use of a static value of ICP (the mean ICP) may not provide the most accurate measure of true, global ICP. One appeal of using AMP instead of the RAP index as a marker for guiding clinical management in patients with raised ICP is the fact that the AMP has been shown to be uninfluenced by baseline effect errors. However one limitation of using AMP, and other parameters of the ICP waveform, as a marker to guide clinical management is the lack of appropriate tools to accurately analyse the ICP waveform objectively. However more sophisticated algorithms are making this less of a problem, such as the MOCAIP (morphological clustering and analysis of continuous intracranial pressure) method [19], which has shown high accuracy in analysing several ICP waveform parameters [55].
It is clear from the literature to date that the use of either the RAP index or the AMP as a marker to guide clinical management has its limitations.
However given the complexity of ICP, and the heterogeneity of the intracranial conditions that it is affected by, it is difficult to imagine that the RAP index or AMP alone will allow the clinician to make an informed decision that will optimise patient outcome, without other factors being involved including patient history, examination findings, basic neuro-imaging, haemodynamic and biochemical markers.
The interval between the onset of raised ICP and just prior to the onset of cerebral damage is where ICP indices could prove most beneficial (Fig. 5).

Conclusion

Raised ICP is in essence the result of cumulative molecular interactions, which establish three-dimensional multi-variant vectors within the intracranial cavity. This in turn generates pressure gradients that are exacerbated by the rigidity of the encompassing skull.
A sound understanding of this complexity of ICP and how it is affected by intracranial conditions is essential to achieve successful clinical outcome. In addition, as the intracranial cavity is essentially a highly dynamic and organised collection of cells and molecules, the use of mathematical and statistical modelling as a tool to accurately quantify and interpret intracranial dynamics is important.
The important role of minimising disturbances in ICP on a patient’s clinical outcome is evident and several studies have improved the ability to use certain ICP parameters to help achieve this. However it remains unclear which of these parameters, specifically, is best in predicting clinical outcome. Both the RAP index and AMP are currently used as markers for certain intracranial physiological parameters; however neither have yet been used as a marker to guide clinical management. Further studies into this potential role of the RAP index and AMP, including current barriers, are warranted.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Dr Ian Piper, Institute of Neurological Sciences, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, for providing the ICP recordings used in Figure 1c.

Contributors

AH did the literature search, reviewed articles, created all of the figures and wrote the manuscript. RO helped in the writing of the manuscript and critically reviewed the article.

Compliance with ethical standards

Declaration of interest

We declare no competing interests.

Funding

No funding was received for this research.

Conflict of interest

All authors certify that they have no affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial interest (such as honoraria; educational grants; participation in speaker’s bureaus; membership, employment, consultancies, stock ownership, or other equity interest; any expert testimony or patent licensing arrangements) or non-financial interest (such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, knowledge or beliefs) in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript.

Ethical approval

This study does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors
Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in this study.

Animal experiments

This study does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

Comments

Intracranial pressure is a fundamental signal informing about cerebral homeostasis in the majority of acute and chronic neurological diseases. In neurocritical care it should be interpreted in conjunction with other signals as a part of multimodal brain monitoring. In hydrocephalus or idiopathic intracranial hypertension, ICP is frequently interpreted alone, and additional information may be derived from its pulse waveform, respiratory, composition of slow waves (more or less periodical frequencies slower than 0.05 Hz), pathological plateau or ‘hyperaemic’ elevations. The pulse waveform of ICP has a long list of great publications such as Avezaat and Ejindhoven’s PhD thesis (1), Portnoy’s arterial pulse to ICP pulse transmission models (2) or the morphological description from the Los Angeles group animated by Xiao Hu (3) and many others. The amplitude of the ICP pulse (AMP) is an effect of pulsation of arterial blood inside compliant cerebral arteries. AMP is roughly proportional to the magnitude of its source (i.e. the amplitude of arterial blood pulsations) and a ratio of compartmental compliances of the cerebral arterial bed and cerebrospinal fluid space. In individual cases the AMP usually increases when the mean ICP increases (4), but only when changes in the mean ICP are not solely procured by changes of central venous pressure (like in a change of body position, but also the Queckenstedt test) or the intracranial pressure-volume curve is very flat (like after craniectomy). In turn, the RAP is a mathematical index derived from changes in the ICP and AMP. As such, it is secondary to the observed changes in the ICP and AMP. Because of the proposed [and verified by so many neuroscientists (5)] linear-exponential shape of the pressure-volume characteristic, it may inform us whether the current working point is on the flat (or linear) part of the curve or exponential (non-linear). In the first case the RAP is close to 0 (signifying the compensatory reserve is good) and in the second close to +1 (the compensatory reserve is exhausted). At very high ICPs, where the pressure-volume curve deflects to the right (5) and decreases its slope (which denotes a critical ICP above which the arterial bed starts to collapse, i.e. the critical closing pressure reaches diastolic blood pressure), the RAP becomes negative.
It is difficult to say which of the two descriptors, AMP or RAP, is more useful. I am sure that both parameters should be analysed in conjunction. High AMP is not always associated with RAP close to +1. And RAP around 0 is not always associated with low AMP. AMP says more about cerebrovascular phenomena associated with arterial blood transport, and RAP characterises better pressure-volume compensatory reserve. Both may be useful, but RAP cannot be evaluated without proper detection of AMP. And AMP equal to 0 may mean that the patient died, his cerebrospinal compliance is abnormally high, or the ICP transducer is broken. References: 1. Avezaat CJJ, van Eijndhoven JHM: Cerebrospinal pulse pressure and craniospinal dynamics. Thesis. A Jongbloed and Zoon Publishers, The Hague,1984. 2. Portnoy HD, Chopp M, Branch C, Shannon M: Cerebrospinal fluid pulse waveform as an indicator of cerebral autoregulation. J. Neurosurg 56: 666-678, 1982.3. Hu X, Glenn T, Scalzo F, Bergsneider M, Sarkiss C, Martin N, Vespa P. Intracranial pressure pulse morphological features improved detection of decreased cerebral blood flow. Physiol Meas. 2010 May;31(5):679-95.4. Brawanski A, Meixensberger J, Zophel R, Ulrich W: The PA/ICP relationship in head injured patients: is there only one relationship? in JT Hoff, AL Betz (eds): ICP VII. Springer Verlag 1989, p 634-636.5. Lofgren J, von Essen C, Zwetnow NN: The pressure-volume curve of the cerebrospinal fluid space in dogs. Acta Neurol Scand 1973; 49:557-574
Marek Czosnyka
Cambridge UK
1. Avezaat CJJ, van Eijndhoven JHM : Cerebrospinal Pulse Pressure and Craniospinal Dynamics. Thesis. A Jongbloed and Zoon Publishers, The Hague,1984.
2. Portnoy HD, Chopp M, Branch C, Shannon M: Cerebrospinal fluid pulse waveform as an indicator of cerebral autoregulation. J. Neurosurg 56: 666-678, 1982.
3. Hu X, Glenn T, Scalzo F, Bergsneider M, Sarkiss C, Martin N, Vespa P. Intracranial pressure pulse morphological features improved detection of decreased cerebral blood flow. Physiol Meas. 2010 May;31(5):679-95.
4. Brawanski A, Meixensberger J, Zophel R, Ulrich W: The PA/ICP relationship in head injured patients: is there only one relationship ? in JT Hoff, AL Betz (eds): ICP VII. Springer Verlag 1989, p 634-636.
5. Lofgren J, von Essen C, Zwetnow NN: The pressure-volume curve of the cerebrospinal fluid space in dogs. Acta Neurol Scand1973; 49:557-574

Unsere Produktempfehlungen

Die Chirurgie

Print-Titel

Das Abo mit mehr Tiefe

Mit der Zeitschrift Die Chirurgie erhalten Sie zusätzlich Online-Zugriff auf weitere 43 chirurgische Fachzeitschriften, CME-Fortbildungen, Webinare, Vorbereitungskursen zur Facharztprüfung und die digitale Enzyklopädie e.Medpedia.

Bis 30. April 2024 bestellen und im ersten Jahr nur 199 € zahlen!

e.Med Interdisziplinär

Kombi-Abonnement

Für Ihren Erfolg in Klinik und Praxis - Die beste Hilfe in Ihrem Arbeitsalltag

Mit e.Med Interdisziplinär erhalten Sie Zugang zu allen CME-Fortbildungen und Fachzeitschriften auf SpringerMedizin.de.

e.Med Neurologie & Psychiatrie

Kombi-Abonnement

Mit e.Med Neurologie & Psychiatrie erhalten Sie Zugang zu CME-Fortbildungen der Fachgebiete, den Premium-Inhalten der dazugehörigen Fachzeitschriften, inklusive einer gedruckten Zeitschrift Ihrer Wahl.

Weitere Produktempfehlungen anzeigen
Literatur
1.
Zurück zum Zitat Czosnyka M, Steiner L, Balestreri M, Schmidt E, Smielewski P, Hutchinson PJ, Pickard JD (2005) Concept of “true ICP” in monitoring and prognostication in head trauma. Acta Neurochir Suppl 95:341–344CrossRefPubMed Czosnyka M, Steiner L, Balestreri M, Schmidt E, Smielewski P, Hutchinson PJ, Pickard JD (2005) Concept of “true ICP” in monitoring and prognostication in head trauma. Acta Neurochir Suppl 95:341–344CrossRefPubMed
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Kim DJ, Czosnyka Z, Keong N, Radolovich DK, Smielewski P, Sutcliffe MP, Pickard JD, Czosnyka M (2009) Index of compensatory reserve in hydrocephalus. Neurosurgery 64(3):494–501CrossRefPubMed Kim DJ, Czosnyka Z, Keong N, Radolovich DK, Smielewski P, Sutcliffe MP, Pickard JD, Czosnyka M (2009) Index of compensatory reserve in hydrocephalus. Neurosurgery 64(3):494–501CrossRefPubMed
3.
Zurück zum Zitat Eide PK, Sorteberg A, Meling TR, Sorteberg W (2014) The effect of baseline pressure errors on an intracranial pressure-derived index: results of a prospective observational study. Bio Med Eng 13:99 Eide PK, Sorteberg A, Meling TR, Sorteberg W (2014) The effect of baseline pressure errors on an intracranial pressure-derived index: results of a prospective observational study. Bio Med Eng 13:99
4.
Zurück zum Zitat Steiner LA, Andrews PJD. Monitoring the injured brain: ICP and CBF. BJA 97(1) 26–38 Steiner LA, Andrews PJD. Monitoring the injured brain: ICP and CBF. BJA 97(1) 26–38
5.
Zurück zum Zitat Budohoski KP, Schmidt B, Smielewski P, Kasprowicz M, Plontke R, Pickard JD, Klingelhöfer J, Czosnyka M (2012) Non-invasively estimated ICP pulse amplitude strongly correlates with outcome after TBI. Acta Neurochir Suppl 114:121–125CrossRefPubMed Budohoski KP, Schmidt B, Smielewski P, Kasprowicz M, Plontke R, Pickard JD, Klingelhöfer J, Czosnyka M (2012) Non-invasively estimated ICP pulse amplitude strongly correlates with outcome after TBI. Acta Neurochir Suppl 114:121–125CrossRefPubMed
7.
Zurück zum Zitat Krainik A, Hund-Georgiadis M, Zysset S, Yves von Cramon D (2005) Regional impairment of cerebrovascular reactivity and BOLD signal in adults after stroke. Stroke 36(6):1146–1152CrossRefPubMed Krainik A, Hund-Georgiadis M, Zysset S, Yves von Cramon D (2005) Regional impairment of cerebrovascular reactivity and BOLD signal in adults after stroke. Stroke 36(6):1146–1152CrossRefPubMed
8.
Zurück zum Zitat Zhang L, Yang KH, King AI (2004) A proposed injury threshold for mild traumatic brain injury. J Biomech Eng 126:226–236CrossRefPubMed Zhang L, Yang KH, King AI (2004) A proposed injury threshold for mild traumatic brain injury. J Biomech Eng 126:226–236CrossRefPubMed
9.
Zurück zum Zitat Hodkinson DJ, O’Daly O, Zunszain PA, Pariante CM, Lazurenko V, Zelaya FO, Howard MA, Williams SCR (2014) Circadian and homeostatic modulation of functional connectivity and regional cerebral blood flow in humans under normal entrained conditions. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 34:1493–1499CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Hodkinson DJ, O’Daly O, Zunszain PA, Pariante CM, Lazurenko V, Zelaya FO, Howard MA, Williams SCR (2014) Circadian and homeostatic modulation of functional connectivity and regional cerebral blood flow in humans under normal entrained conditions. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 34:1493–1499CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
10.
Zurück zum Zitat Füchtemeier M, Leithner C, Offenhauser N, Foddis M, Kohl-Bareis M, Dirnagl U, Lindauer U, Royl G (2010) Elevating intracranial pressure reverses the decrease in deoxygenated hemoglobin and abolishes the post-stimulus overshoot upon somatosensory activation in rats. NeuroImage 52(2):445–454CrossRefPubMed Füchtemeier M, Leithner C, Offenhauser N, Foddis M, Kohl-Bareis M, Dirnagl U, Lindauer U, Royl G (2010) Elevating intracranial pressure reverses the decrease in deoxygenated hemoglobin and abolishes the post-stimulus overshoot upon somatosensory activation in rats. NeuroImage 52(2):445–454CrossRefPubMed
11.
Zurück zum Zitat Dirven PJ, Haitsma IK, Hoeks SE, Gommers D, Stolker RJ (2015) Ultrasonographic measured optic nerve sheath diameter as an accurate and quick monitor for changes in intracranial pressure. J Neurosurg 123(3):743–747CrossRefPubMed Dirven PJ, Haitsma IK, Hoeks SE, Gommers D, Stolker RJ (2015) Ultrasonographic measured optic nerve sheath diameter as an accurate and quick monitor for changes in intracranial pressure. J Neurosurg 123(3):743–747CrossRefPubMed
12.
Zurück zum Zitat Kristiansson H, Nissborg E, Bartek J Jr, Andresen M, Reinstrup P, Romner B (2013) Measuring elevated intracranial pressure through noninvasive methods: a review of the literature. J Neurosurg Anesthesiol 25(4):372–385CrossRefPubMed Kristiansson H, Nissborg E, Bartek J Jr, Andresen M, Reinstrup P, Romner B (2013) Measuring elevated intracranial pressure through noninvasive methods: a review of the literature. J Neurosurg Anesthesiol 25(4):372–385CrossRefPubMed
13.
Zurück zum Zitat Avezaat CJJ, Eijndhoven JHM (1984) Cerebrospinal fluid pulse pressure and craniospinal dynamics. A theoretical, clinical and experimental study [Thesis]. The Hague: Jongbloed A Avezaat CJJ, Eijndhoven JHM (1984) Cerebrospinal fluid pulse pressure and craniospinal dynamics. A theoretical, clinical and experimental study [Thesis]. The Hague: Jongbloed A
14.
Zurück zum Zitat Borgesen SE, Gjerris F (1982) The predictive value of conductance to outflow of CSF in normal pressure hydrocephalus. Brain 105:65–86CrossRefPubMed Borgesen SE, Gjerris F (1982) The predictive value of conductance to outflow of CSF in normal pressure hydrocephalus. Brain 105:65–86CrossRefPubMed
15.
16.
Zurück zum Zitat Marmarou A, Shulman K, Rosende RM (1978) A non-linear analysis of CSF system and intracranial pressure dynamics. J Neurosurg 48:332–344CrossRefPubMed Marmarou A, Shulman K, Rosende RM (1978) A non-linear analysis of CSF system and intracranial pressure dynamics. J Neurosurg 48:332–344CrossRefPubMed
17.
Zurück zum Zitat Varsos GV, Kasprowicz M, Smielewski P, Czosnyka M (2014) Model-based indices describing cerebrovascular dynamics. Neurocrit Care 20(1):142–157CrossRefPubMed Varsos GV, Kasprowicz M, Smielewski P, Czosnyka M (2014) Model-based indices describing cerebrovascular dynamics. Neurocrit Care 20(1):142–157CrossRefPubMed
18.
Zurück zum Zitat Aries MJ, de Jong SF, van Dijk JM, Regtien J, Depreitere B, Czosnyka M, Smielewski P, Elting JW (2015) Observation of autoregulation indices during ventricular CSF drainage after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: a pilot study. Neurocrit Care 23(3):347–354CrossRefPubMed Aries MJ, de Jong SF, van Dijk JM, Regtien J, Depreitere B, Czosnyka M, Smielewski P, Elting JW (2015) Observation of autoregulation indices during ventricular CSF drainage after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: a pilot study. Neurocrit Care 23(3):347–354CrossRefPubMed
19.
Zurück zum Zitat Hu X, Xu P, Scalzo F (2009) Morphological clustering and analysis of continuous intracranial pressure. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 56(3):696–705CrossRefPubMed Hu X, Xu P, Scalzo F (2009) Morphological clustering and analysis of continuous intracranial pressure. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 56(3):696–705CrossRefPubMed
20.
Zurück zum Zitat Hu X, Xu P, Asgari S, Vespa P, Bergsneider M (2010) Forecasting ICP elevation based on prescient changes of intracranial pressure waveform morphology. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 57(5):1070–1078 (19)CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Hu X, Xu P, Asgari S, Vespa P, Bergsneider M (2010) Forecasting ICP elevation based on prescient changes of intracranial pressure waveform morphology. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 57(5):1070–1078 (19)CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
21.
Zurück zum Zitat Passi N, Degnan AJ, Levy LM (2013) MR imaging of papilledema and visual pathways: effects of increased intracranial pressure and pathophysiologic mechanisms. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 34(5):919–924CrossRefPubMed Passi N, Degnan AJ, Levy LM (2013) MR imaging of papilledema and visual pathways: effects of increased intracranial pressure and pathophysiologic mechanisms. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 34(5):919–924CrossRefPubMed
22.
Zurück zum Zitat Ji Z, Zhu L, Yang X, Jiang L (2011) Single wave extraction in continuous intracrania pressure signal with lifting wavelet transformation and discrimination rules. EURASIP J Adv Signal Process 2011:43CrossRef Ji Z, Zhu L, Yang X, Jiang L (2011) Single wave extraction in continuous intracrania pressure signal with lifting wavelet transformation and discrimination rules. EURASIP J Adv Signal Process 2011:43CrossRef
23.
Zurück zum Zitat Ben-Sira L, Goder N, Bassan H, Lifshits S, Assaf Y, Constantini S (2015) Clinical benefits of diffusion tensor imaging in hydrocephalus. J Neurosurg Pediatr 16(2):195–202CrossRefPubMed Ben-Sira L, Goder N, Bassan H, Lifshits S, Assaf Y, Constantini S (2015) Clinical benefits of diffusion tensor imaging in hydrocephalus. J Neurosurg Pediatr 16(2):195–202CrossRefPubMed
24.
Zurück zum Zitat Carrera E, Kim DJ, Castellani G, Zweifel C, Czosnyka KM, Smielewski P, Pickard JD, Czosnyka M (2010) What shapes pulse amplitude of intracranial pressure? J Neurotrauma 27:317–324CrossRefPubMed Carrera E, Kim DJ, Castellani G, Zweifel C, Czosnyka KM, Smielewski P, Pickard JD, Czosnyka M (2010) What shapes pulse amplitude of intracranial pressure? J Neurotrauma 27:317–324CrossRefPubMed
25.
Zurück zum Zitat Radolovich DK, Aries MJ, Castellani G, Corona A, Lavinio A, Smielewski P, Pickard JD, Czosnyka M (2011) Pulsatile intra-cranial pressure and cerebral autoregulation after traumatic brain injury. Neurocrit Care 15(3):379–386CrossRefPubMed Radolovich DK, Aries MJ, Castellani G, Corona A, Lavinio A, Smielewski P, Pickard JD, Czosnyka M (2011) Pulsatile intra-cranial pressure and cerebral autoregulation after traumatic brain injury. Neurocrit Care 15(3):379–386CrossRefPubMed
26.
Zurück zum Zitat Eide PK (2005) Assessment of childhood intracranial pressure recordings using a new method of processing intracranial pressure signals. Pediatr Neurosurg 41(3):122–130CrossRefPubMed Eide PK (2005) Assessment of childhood intracranial pressure recordings using a new method of processing intracranial pressure signals. Pediatr Neurosurg 41(3):122–130CrossRefPubMed
27.
Zurück zum Zitat Holm S, Eide PK (2008) The frequency domain versus time domain methods for processing of intracranial pressure (ICP) signals. Med Eng Phys 30(2):164–170CrossRefPubMed Holm S, Eide PK (2008) The frequency domain versus time domain methods for processing of intracranial pressure (ICP) signals. Med Eng Phys 30(2):164–170CrossRefPubMed
28.
Zurück zum Zitat Lee HJ, Jeong EJ, Kim H, Czosnyka M, Kim DJ. (2015) Morphological feature extraction from a continuous intracranial pressure pulse via a peak clustering algorithm. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng Lee HJ, Jeong EJ, Kim H, Czosnyka M, Kim DJ. (2015) Morphological feature extraction from a continuous intracranial pressure pulse via a peak clustering algorithm. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng
29.
Zurück zum Zitat Kasprowicz M, Bergsneider M, Czosnyka M, Hu X (2012) Association between ICP pulse waveform morphology and ICP B waves. Acta Neurochir Suppl 114:29–34CrossRefPubMed Kasprowicz M, Bergsneider M, Czosnyka M, Hu X (2012) Association between ICP pulse waveform morphology and ICP B waves. Acta Neurochir Suppl 114:29–34CrossRefPubMed
30.
Zurück zum Zitat Eide PK, Sorteberg W (2006) Intracranial pressure and single wave amplitudes, Glasgow Coma Score and Glasgow Outcome Score after subarachnoid haemorrhage. Acta Neurochir (Wein) 148:1267–1275, 21CrossRef Eide PK, Sorteberg W (2006) Intracranial pressure and single wave amplitudes, Glasgow Coma Score and Glasgow Outcome Score after subarachnoid haemorrhage. Acta Neurochir (Wein) 148:1267–1275, 21CrossRef
31.
Zurück zum Zitat Eide PK, Sorteberg W (2013) An intracranial pressure-derived index monitored simultaneously from two separate sensors in patients with cerebral bleeds: comparison of findings. Bio Med Eng 12:14 Eide PK, Sorteberg W (2013) An intracranial pressure-derived index monitored simultaneously from two separate sensors in patients with cerebral bleeds: comparison of findings. Bio Med Eng 12:14
32.
Zurück zum Zitat Eide PK, Bentsen G, Sorteberg AG, Marthinsen PB, Stubhaug A, Sorteberg W (2011) A randomized and blinded single-center trial comparing the effect of intracranial pressure and intracranial pressure wave amplitude-guided intensive care management on early clinical state and 12-month outcome in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Neurosurgery 69(5):1105–1115PubMed Eide PK, Bentsen G, Sorteberg AG, Marthinsen PB, Stubhaug A, Sorteberg W (2011) A randomized and blinded single-center trial comparing the effect of intracranial pressure and intracranial pressure wave amplitude-guided intensive care management on early clinical state and 12-month outcome in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Neurosurgery 69(5):1105–1115PubMed
33.
Zurück zum Zitat Eide PK (2006) Comparison of simultaneous continuous intracranial pressure (ICP) signals from a Codman and a Camino ICP sensor. Med Eng Phys 28(6):542–549CrossRefPubMed Eide PK (2006) Comparison of simultaneous continuous intracranial pressure (ICP) signals from a Codman and a Camino ICP sensor. Med Eng Phys 28(6):542–549CrossRefPubMed
34.
Zurück zum Zitat Chambers IR, Banister K, Mendelow AD (2001) Intracranial pressure within a developing intracerebral haemorrhage. Br J Neurosurg 15:140–141CrossRefPubMed Chambers IR, Banister K, Mendelow AD (2001) Intracranial pressure within a developing intracerebral haemorrhage. Br J Neurosurg 15:140–141CrossRefPubMed
35.
Zurück zum Zitat Fernandes HM, Siddique S, Banister K, Chambers I, Wooldridge T, Gregson B, Mendelow AD (2000) Continuous monitoring of ICP and CPP following ICH and its relationship to clinical, radiological and surgical parameters. Acta Neurochir Suppl 76:463–466PubMed Fernandes HM, Siddique S, Banister K, Chambers I, Wooldridge T, Gregson B, Mendelow AD (2000) Continuous monitoring of ICP and CPP following ICH and its relationship to clinical, radiological and surgical parameters. Acta Neurochir Suppl 76:463–466PubMed
36.
Zurück zum Zitat Rosner MJ (1995) Introduction to cerebral perfusion pressure management. Neurosurg Clin N Am 6:761–773PubMed Rosner MJ (1995) Introduction to cerebral perfusion pressure management. Neurosurg Clin N Am 6:761–773PubMed
37.
Zurück zum Zitat Rosner MJ, Daughton S (1990) Cerebral perfusion pressure management in head injury. J Trauma 30:933–940CrossRefPubMed Rosner MJ, Daughton S (1990) Cerebral perfusion pressure management in head injury. J Trauma 30:933–940CrossRefPubMed
38.
Zurück zum Zitat Oertel M, Kelly DF, Lee JH, Glenn TC, Vespa PM, Martin NA (2002) Is CPP therapy beneficial for all patients with high ICP? Acta Neurochir Suppl 81:67–68PubMed Oertel M, Kelly DF, Lee JH, Glenn TC, Vespa PM, Martin NA (2002) Is CPP therapy beneficial for all patients with high ICP? Acta Neurochir Suppl 81:67–68PubMed
39.
Zurück zum Zitat Lundberg N (1960) Continuous recording and control of ventricular fluid pressure in neurosurgical practice. Acta Psychiatr Scand Suppl 36:1–193PubMed Lundberg N (1960) Continuous recording and control of ventricular fluid pressure in neurosurgical practice. Acta Psychiatr Scand Suppl 36:1–193PubMed
40.
Zurück zum Zitat Baird TA, Parsons MW, Phanh T, Butcher KS, Desmond PM, Tress BM, Colman PG, Chambers BR, Davis SM (2003) Persistent poststroke hyper-glycemia is independently associated with infarct expansion and worse clinical outcome. Stroke 34:2208–2214CrossRefPubMed Baird TA, Parsons MW, Phanh T, Butcher KS, Desmond PM, Tress BM, Colman PG, Chambers BR, Davis SM (2003) Persistent poststroke hyper-glycemia is independently associated with infarct expansion and worse clinical outcome. Stroke 34:2208–2214CrossRefPubMed
41.
Zurück zum Zitat Bruno A, Levine SR, Frankel MR, Brott TG, Lin Y, Tilley BC, Lyden PD, Broderick JP, Kwiatkowski TG, Fineberg SE (2002) NINDS rt-PA stroke study group. Admission glucose level and clinical outcomes in the NINDS rt-PA stroke trial. Neurology 59:669–674CrossRefPubMed Bruno A, Levine SR, Frankel MR, Brott TG, Lin Y, Tilley BC, Lyden PD, Broderick JP, Kwiatkowski TG, Fineberg SE (2002) NINDS rt-PA stroke study group. Admission glucose level and clinical outcomes in the NINDS rt-PA stroke trial. Neurology 59:669–674CrossRefPubMed
42.
Zurück zum Zitat Jeremitsky E, Omert LA, Dunham CM, Wilberger J, Rodriguez A (2005) The impact of hyperglycemia on patients with severe head injury. J Trauma 58:47–50CrossRefPubMed Jeremitsky E, Omert LA, Dunham CM, Wilberger J, Rodriguez A (2005) The impact of hyperglycemia on patients with severe head injury. J Trauma 58:47–50CrossRefPubMed
43.
Zurück zum Zitat Rovlias A, Kotsou S (2000) The influence of hyperglycemia on neurological outcome in patients with severe head injury. Neurosurgery 46:335–342CrossRefPubMed Rovlias A, Kotsou S (2000) The influence of hyperglycemia on neurological outcome in patients with severe head injury. Neurosurgery 46:335–342CrossRefPubMed
44.
Zurück zum Zitat Leigh R, Zaidat OO, Suri MF, Lynch G, Sundararajan S, Sunshine JL, Tarr R, Selman W, Landis DM, Suarez JI (2004) Predictors of hyperacute clinical worsening in ischemic stroke patients receiving thrombolytic therapy. Stroke 35:1903–1907CrossRefPubMed Leigh R, Zaidat OO, Suri MF, Lynch G, Sundararajan S, Sunshine JL, Tarr R, Selman W, Landis DM, Suarez JI (2004) Predictors of hyperacute clinical worsening in ischemic stroke patients receiving thrombolytic therapy. Stroke 35:1903–1907CrossRefPubMed
45.
Zurück zum Zitat Van den Berghe G, Schoonheydt K, Becx P, Bruyninckx F, Wouters PJ (2005) Insulin therapy protects the central and peripheral nervous system of intensive care patients. Neurology 64:1348–1353CrossRefPubMed Van den Berghe G, Schoonheydt K, Becx P, Bruyninckx F, Wouters PJ (2005) Insulin therapy protects the central and peripheral nervous system of intensive care patients. Neurology 64:1348–1353CrossRefPubMed
46.
Zurück zum Zitat Michenfelder JD, Milde JH (1991) The relationship among canine brain temperature, metabolism, and function during hypothermia. Anesthesiology 75:130–136CrossRefPubMed Michenfelder JD, Milde JH (1991) The relationship among canine brain temperature, metabolism, and function during hypothermia. Anesthesiology 75:130–136CrossRefPubMed
48.
Zurück zum Zitat White H, Cook D, Venkatesh B (2006) The use of hypertonic saline for treating intracranial hypertension after traumatic brain injury. Anesth Analg 102:1836–1846CrossRefPubMed White H, Cook D, Venkatesh B (2006) The use of hypertonic saline for treating intracranial hypertension after traumatic brain injury. Anesth Analg 102:1836–1846CrossRefPubMed
49.
Zurück zum Zitat Mangat HS, Chiu YL, Gerber LM, Alimi M, Ghajar J, Härtl R (2015) Hypertonic saline reduces cumulative and daily intracranial pressure burdens after severe traumatic brain injury. J Neurosurg 122(1):202–210CrossRefPubMed Mangat HS, Chiu YL, Gerber LM, Alimi M, Ghajar J, Härtl R (2015) Hypertonic saline reduces cumulative and daily intracranial pressure burdens after severe traumatic brain injury. J Neurosurg 122(1):202–210CrossRefPubMed
50.
Zurück zum Zitat Gudeman S, Miller J, Becker D (1979) Failure of high-dose steroid therapy to influence intracranial pressure in patients with severe head injury. J Neurosurg 51:301–306CrossRefPubMed Gudeman S, Miller J, Becker D (1979) Failure of high-dose steroid therapy to influence intracranial pressure in patients with severe head injury. J Neurosurg 51:301–306CrossRefPubMed
51.
Zurück zum Zitat Saul T, Ducker T, Saleman M, Carro E (1981) Steroids in severe head injury: a prospective, randomized clinical trial. J Neurosurg 54:596–600CrossRefPubMed Saul T, Ducker T, Saleman M, Carro E (1981) Steroids in severe head injury: a prospective, randomized clinical trial. J Neurosurg 54:596–600CrossRefPubMed
52.
Zurück zum Zitat Saul T, Ducker T, Saleman M, Carro E (1981) Steroids in severe head injury: a prospective, randomized clinical trial. J Neurosurg 54:596–600CrossRefPubMed Saul T, Ducker T, Saleman M, Carro E (1981) Steroids in severe head injury: a prospective, randomized clinical trial. J Neurosurg 54:596–600CrossRefPubMed
53.
Zurück zum Zitat Feigin VL, Anderson N, Rinkel GJ, Algra A, van Gijn J, Bennett DA (2005) Corticosteroids for aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage and primary intracerebral haemorrhage. Cochrane Database Syst Rev Feigin VL, Anderson N, Rinkel GJ, Algra A, van Gijn J, Bennett DA (2005) Corticosteroids for aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage and primary intracerebral haemorrhage. Cochrane Database Syst Rev
54.
Zurück zum Zitat Lozier AP, Sciacca RR, Romagnoli MF, Connolly ES Jr (2002) Ventriculostomy-related infections: a critical review of the literature. Neurosurgery 51:170–181CrossRefPubMed Lozier AP, Sciacca RR, Romagnoli MF, Connolly ES Jr (2002) Ventriculostomy-related infections: a critical review of the literature. Neurosurgery 51:170–181CrossRefPubMed
55.
Zurück zum Zitat Freeman WD (2015) Management of intracranial pressure. Continuum (Minneap Minn) 21(5 Neurocritical Care):1299–1323 Freeman WD (2015) Management of intracranial pressure. Continuum (Minneap Minn) 21(5 Neurocritical Care):1299–1323
56.
Zurück zum Zitat HallowayKL, Barnes T, Choi S, Bullock R,Marshall LF, Eisenberg HM, Jane JA, Ward JD, Young HF, Marmarou A (1996) Ventricolostomy infections: the effect of monitoring duration and catheter exchange in 584 patients. J Neurosurg 85:419–424 HallowayKL, Barnes T, Choi S, Bullock R,Marshall LF, Eisenberg HM, Jane JA, Ward JD, Young HF, Marmarou A (1996) Ventricolostomy infections: the effect of monitoring duration and catheter exchange in 584 patients. J Neurosurg 85:419–424
57.
Zurück zum Zitat Schwab S, Georgiadis D, Berrouschot J, Schellinger PD, Graffagnino C, Mayer SA (2001) Feasibility and safety of moderate hypothermia after massive hemispheric infarction. Stroke 32:2033–2035CrossRefPubMed Schwab S, Georgiadis D, Berrouschot J, Schellinger PD, Graffagnino C, Mayer SA (2001) Feasibility and safety of moderate hypothermia after massive hemispheric infarction. Stroke 32:2033–2035CrossRefPubMed
59.
Zurück zum Zitat Juvela S, Heiskanen O, Poranen A, Valtonen S, Kuurne T, Kaste M, Troupp H (1989) The treatment of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage: a prospective randomized trial of surgical and conservative treatment. J Neurosurg 70:755–758CrossRefPubMed Juvela S, Heiskanen O, Poranen A, Valtonen S, Kuurne T, Kaste M, Troupp H (1989) The treatment of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage: a prospective randomized trial of surgical and conservative treatment. J Neurosurg 70:755–758CrossRefPubMed
60.
Zurück zum Zitat Mendelow AD, Gregson BA, Fernandes HM, Murray GD, Teasdale GM, Hope DT, Karimi A, Shaw MD, Barer DH (2005) Early surgery versus initial conservative treatment in patients with spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral haematomas in the International Surgical Trial in Intracerebral Haemorrhage (STICH): a randomised trial. Lancet 365:387–397CrossRefPubMed Mendelow AD, Gregson BA, Fernandes HM, Murray GD, Teasdale GM, Hope DT, Karimi A, Shaw MD, Barer DH (2005) Early surgery versus initial conservative treatment in patients with spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral haematomas in the International Surgical Trial in Intracerebral Haemorrhage (STICH): a randomised trial. Lancet 365:387–397CrossRefPubMed
61.
Zurück zum Zitat Zuccarello M, Brott T, Derex L, Kothari R, Sauerbeck L, Tew J, Van Loveren H, Yeh HS, Tomsick T, Pancioli A, Khoury J, Broderick J (1999) Early surgical treatment for supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage: a randomized feasibility study. Stroke 30:1833–1839CrossRefPubMed Zuccarello M, Brott T, Derex L, Kothari R, Sauerbeck L, Tew J, Van Loveren H, Yeh HS, Tomsick T, Pancioli A, Khoury J, Broderick J (1999) Early surgical treatment for supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage: a randomized feasibility study. Stroke 30:1833–1839CrossRefPubMed
62.
Zurück zum Zitat Czosnyka M, Czosnyka Z, Keong N, Lavinio A, Smielewski P, Momjian S, Schmidt EA, Petrella G, Owler B, Pickard JD (2007) Pulse pressure waveform in hydrocephalus: what it is and what it isn’t. Neurosurg Focus 22(4):E1. 11CrossRef Czosnyka M, Czosnyka Z, Keong N, Lavinio A, Smielewski P, Momjian S, Schmidt EA, Petrella G, Owler B, Pickard JD (2007) Pulse pressure waveform in hydrocephalus: what it is and what it isn’t. Neurosurg Focus 22(4):E1. 11CrossRef
63.
Zurück zum Zitat Kase C (1994) Cerebellar hemorrhage. In: Kase CS, Caplan LR (eds) Intracerebral hemorrhage. Mass. Butterworth-Heinemann, Boston, pp 425–443CrossRef Kase C (1994) Cerebellar hemorrhage. In: Kase CS, Caplan LR (eds) Intracerebral hemorrhage. Mass. Butterworth-Heinemann, Boston, pp 425–443CrossRef
64.
Zurück zum Zitat Da Pian R, Bazzan A, Pasqualin A (1984) Surgical versus medical treatment of spontaneous posterior fossa haematomas: a cooperative study on 205 cases. Neurol Res 6:145–151CrossRefPubMed Da Pian R, Bazzan A, Pasqualin A (1984) Surgical versus medical treatment of spontaneous posterior fossa haematomas: a cooperative study on 205 cases. Neurol Res 6:145–151CrossRefPubMed
65.
Zurück zum Zitat Firsching R, Huber M, Frowein RA (1991) Cerebellar haemorrhage: management and prognosis. Neurosurg Rev 14:191–194CrossRefPubMed Firsching R, Huber M, Frowein RA (1991) Cerebellar haemorrhage: management and prognosis. Neurosurg Rev 14:191–194CrossRefPubMed
66.
Zurück zum Zitat Kirollos RW, Tyagi AK, Ross SA, van Hille PT, Marks PV (2001) Management of spontaneous cerebellar hematomas: a prospective treatment protocol. Neurosurgery 49:1378–1386CrossRefPubMed Kirollos RW, Tyagi AK, Ross SA, van Hille PT, Marks PV (2001) Management of spontaneous cerebellar hematomas: a prospective treatment protocol. Neurosurgery 49:1378–1386CrossRefPubMed
67.
Zurück zum Zitat Morioka J, Fujii M, Kato S, Fujisawa H, Akimura T, Suzuki M, Kobayashi S (2006) Surgery for spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage has greater remedial value than conservative therapy. Surg Neurol 65:67–72CrossRefPubMed Morioka J, Fujii M, Kato S, Fujisawa H, Akimura T, Suzuki M, Kobayashi S (2006) Surgery for spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage has greater remedial value than conservative therapy. Surg Neurol 65:67–72CrossRefPubMed
68.
Zurück zum Zitat Sypert G, Arpin-Sypert E (1992) Spontaneous posterior fossa hematomas. In: Kaufman H (ed) Intracerebral hematomas. Raven, New York, pp 187–196 Sypert G, Arpin-Sypert E (1992) Spontaneous posterior fossa hematomas. In: Kaufman H (ed) Intracerebral hematomas. Raven, New York, pp 187–196
69.
Zurück zum Zitat Van Loon J, Van Calenbergh F, Goffin J, Plets C (1993) Controversies in the management of spontaneous cerebellar haemorrhage: a consecutive series of 49 cases and review of the literature. Acta Neurochir (Wien) 122:187–193CrossRef Van Loon J, Van Calenbergh F, Goffin J, Plets C (1993) Controversies in the management of spontaneous cerebellar haemorrhage: a consecutive series of 49 cases and review of the literature. Acta Neurochir (Wien) 122:187–193CrossRef
70.
Zurück zum Zitat Broderick J, Connolly S, Feldmann E, Hanley D, Kase C, Krieger D, Mayberg M, Morgenstern L, Ogilvy CS, Vespa P, Zuccarello M (2007) Guidelines for the management of spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage in adults. Stroke 38:2001–2023CrossRefPubMed Broderick J, Connolly S, Feldmann E, Hanley D, Kase C, Krieger D, Mayberg M, Morgenstern L, Ogilvy CS, Vespa P, Zuccarello M (2007) Guidelines for the management of spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage in adults. Stroke 38:2001–2023CrossRefPubMed
71.
Zurück zum Zitat Whitfield PC, Patel H, Hutchinson PJ, Czosnyka M, Parry D, Menon D, Pickard JD, Kirkpatrick PJ (2001) Bifrontal decompressive cranietcomy in the management of posttraumatic intracranial hypertension. Br J Neurosurg 15(500-7):71 Whitfield PC, Patel H, Hutchinson PJ, Czosnyka M, Parry D, Menon D, Pickard JD, Kirkpatrick PJ (2001) Bifrontal decompressive cranietcomy in the management of posttraumatic intracranial hypertension. Br J Neurosurg 15(500-7):71
72.
Zurück zum Zitat Hutchinson P, Timofeev I, Kirkpatrick P (2007) Surgery for brain edema. Neurosurg Focus 22(5), E14CrossRefPubMed Hutchinson P, Timofeev I, Kirkpatrick P (2007) Surgery for brain edema. Neurosurg Focus 22(5), E14CrossRefPubMed
73.
Zurück zum Zitat Wang JW, Li JP, Song YL, Tan K, Wang Y, Li T, Guo P, Li X, Wang Y, Zhao QH (2016) Decompressive craniectomy in neurocritical care. J Clin Neurosci Wang JW, Li JP, Song YL, Tan K, Wang Y, Li T, Guo P, Li X, Wang Y, Zhao QH (2016) Decompressive craniectomy in neurocritical care. J Clin Neurosci
Metadaten
Titel
The best marker for guiding the clinical management of patients with raised intracranial pressure—the RAP index or the mean pulse amplitude?
verfasst von
Allan Hall
Roddy O’Kane
Publikationsdatum
27.08.2016
Verlag
Springer Vienna
Erschienen in
Acta Neurochirurgica / Ausgabe 10/2016
Print ISSN: 0001-6268
Elektronische ISSN: 0942-0940
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00701-016-2932-z

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 10/2016

Acta Neurochirurgica 10/2016 Zur Ausgabe

Leitlinien kompakt für die Neurologie

Mit medbee Pocketcards sicher entscheiden.

Seit 2022 gehört die medbee GmbH zum Springer Medizin Verlag

Update Neurologie

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.