Cerebral hemodynamic responses to blood pressure manipulation in severely head-injured patients in the presence or absence of intracranial hypertension

OL Cremer*, GW van Dijk, GJ Amelink, AMGA de Smet, KGM Moons, CJ Kalkman

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The management of cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) remains a controversial issue in the critical care of severely head-injured patients. Recently, it has been propose that the state of cerebrovascular autoregulation should determine individual CPP targets. To find optimal perfusion pressure, we pharmacologically manipulated CPP in a range of 51 mm Hg (median; 25th-75th percentile, 48-53 mm Hg) to 108 mm Hg (102-112 mm Hg) on Days 0, 1, and 2 after severe head injury in 13 patients and studied the effects on intracranial pressure (ICP), autoregulation capacity, and brain tissue partial pressure of oxygen. Autoregulation.,vas expressed as a static rate of regulation for 5-mm Hg CPP intervals based on middle cerebral artery flow velocity. When ICP was normal (26 occasions), there were no major changes in the measured variables when CPP was altered from a baseline level of 78 mm Hg (74-83 mm Hg), indicating that the brain was within autoregulation limits. Conversely, when intracranial hypertension was present (11 occasions), CPP reduction to less than 77 mm Hg (73-82 mm Hg) further increased ICP, decreased the static rate of regulation, and decreased brain tissue partial pressure of oxygen, whereas a CPP increase improved these variables, indicating that the brain was operating at the lower limit of autoregulation. We conclude that daily trial manipulation of arterial blood pressure over a wide range can provide information that may be used to optimize CPP management.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1211-1217
Number of pages7
JournalAnesthesia and Analgesia
Volume99
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct-2004
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • TRAUMATIC BRAIN-INJURY
  • PERFUSION-PRESSURE
  • ARTERIAL-HYPERTENSION
  • TISSUE OXYGEN
  • AUTOREGULATION
  • REACTIVITY
  • MANAGEMENT
  • METABOLISM
  • VASOSPASM
  • PROPOFOL

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