Neurophysiology Flashcards

1
Q
A

In newborns and
premature infants, values are lower than adults at 40–42 ml 100 g21 min2

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2
Q
A

From 6 months to 3 yr, CBF is thought to be 90 ml 100 g21 min21 and

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3
Q
A

from 3
to 12 yr at 100 ml 100 g21 min21

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4
Q
A

In children,
CMRO2 is higher at 5.2 ml 100 g21 min21
compared with 3.5 ml 100 g21 min21 in
adults.3

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5
Q
A

Neonates have a lower CMRO2 (2.3
ml 100 g21 min21) and a lower CBF, with a
relative tolerance of hypoxaemia.

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6
Q
A

Arterial PaCO2 has a potent vasodilatory effect
on cerebral blood vessels, leading to an
increase in CBF, which is linear between a
PaCO2 of 3.5 and 8 kPa. At birth, the cerebrovas-
cular response to changes in PaCO2 is incomple-
tely developed. Moderate hypocapnia has less
effect on the newborn brain than in adults and
CBF changes relatively little until severehypocapnia ensues

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7
Q
A

In adults, the cerebral vas-
culature is less sensitive to changes in PaO2;
CBF does not increase until PaO2 decreases
below 50 mm Hg, and then it increases expo-
nentially. In neonates, the CBF increases in
response to smaller decreases in PaO2

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8
Q
A

CBF is autoregulated in response to changes in
mean arterial pressure (MAP). Accurate values
for autoregulatory ranges in infants and chil-
dren are currently unavailable, but are probably
related to their normal MAP. Data from animal
and high-risk human neonate studies postulate
the lower limit for autoregulation to be an
MAP of 20– 40 mm Hg.4 Studies of extremely
low birth weight infants show that autoregula-
tion is functional in normotensive but not hypo-
tensive infants.5 Respiratory distress in infants
also leads to impaired autoregulation;2
increases in CBF outside of autoregulation may
contribute to their susceptibility to intraventri-
cular haemorrhage (IVH

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9
Q
A

In the
infant, before cranial suture fusion, decompres-
sion can occur through an increase in skull
size. The posterior fontanelle closes at about 6
months of age, the anterior fontanelle at around
1 yr–18 months, and final cranial suture
closure may be as late as 10 yr old. Increases
in intracranial volume can only be accommo-
dated if the change is gradual. Acute increases,
such as after traumatic brain injury, will still
result in raised ICP as in adults

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