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  • Title: The Acute Phase of Experimental Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: Intracranial Pressure Dynamics and Their Effect on Cerebral Blood Flow and Autoregulation.
    Author: Conzen C, Becker K, Albanna W, Weiss M, Bach A, Lushina N, Steimers A, Pinkernell S, Clusmann H, Lindauer U, Schubert GA.
    Journal: Transl Stroke Res; 2019 Oct; 10(5):566-582. PubMed ID: 30443885.
    Abstract:
    Clinical presentation and neurological outcome in subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is highly variable. Aneurysmal SAH (aSAH) is hallmarked by sudden increase of intracranial pressure (ICP) and acute hypoperfusion contributing to early brain injury (EBI) and worse outcome, while milder or non-aneurysmal SAH with comparable amount of blood are associated with better neurological outcome, possibly due to less dramatic changes in ICP. Acute pressure dynamics may therefore be an important pathophysiological aspect determining neurological complications and outcome. We investigated the influence of ICP variability on acute changes after SAH by modulating injection velocity and composition in an experimental model of SAH. Five hundred microliters of arterial blood (AB) or normal saline (NS) were injected intracisternally over 1 (AB1, NS1), 10 (AB10, NS10), or 30 min (AB30) with monitoring for 6 h (n = 68). Rapid blood injection resulted in highest ICP peaks (AB1 median 142.7 mmHg [1.Q 116.7-3.Q 230.6], AB30 33.42 mmHg [18.8-38.3], p < 0.001) and most severe hypoperfusion (AB1 16.6% [11.3-30.6], AB30 44.2% [34.8-59.8]; p < 0.05). However, after 30 min, all blood groups showed comparable ICP elevation and prolonged hypoperfusion. Cerebral autoregulation was disrupted initially due to the immediate ICP increase in all groups except NS10; only AB1, however, resulted in sustained impairment of autoregulation, as well as early neuronal cell loss. Rapidity and composition of hemorrhage resulted in characteristic hyperacute hemodynamic changes, with comparable hypoperfusion despite different ICP ranges. Only rapid ICP increase was associated with pronounced and early, but sustained disruption of cerebral autoregulation, possibly contributing to EBI.
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