Raised Intracranial Pressure Flashcards
Describe how intracranial pressure is regulated normally
- Normal intracranial pressure usually 5-15mm Hg and can be measured using a manometer
- Autoregulation through vasoconstriction and vasodilation
- Chemoregulation through vasodilation in response to low cerebral pH
- Increase blood to oxygenate area
Describe how intracranial pressure is regulated in the presence of a tumour
- CSF and venous blood volume can decrease to attempt to maintain intracranial pressure when there are other occupants within the fixed volume of the cranium
- Can only compensate to a certain degree - if mass is too big then ICP will rise
Describe the pathophysiology of raised intracranial pressure
- A reduction in blood supply to brain cells occurs due to compression by intracranial tumour
- Oxygen required to produce ATP and maintain Na/K ATPase
- Leads to increase in Na concentration inside the cell, thus causing water accumulation
- This is known as cytotoxic cellular oedema, where cells swell and eventually burst
- Swelling causes further compression of blood vessels, which further decreases oxygen supply to brain cells
List the signs and symptoms of raised intracranial pressure
- Headache
- Vomiting
- Visual disturbances
- Depression of conscious level
- Increasing head size in infants
Describe the pathophysiology behind headaches in raised ICP
- Generalised, progressive ache
- Worse on awakening in the morning - by laying down, increased venous circulation in head causes increased pressure
- Hypoventilation also decreases removal of CO2, thus increasing CO2 levels leading to venodilation which increases pressure
- Aggravated by coughing or sneezing
- Coughing increases intrathoracic pressure, which compresses SVC and stagnates venous flow from head
Describe the different visual disturbances seen in raised ICP
- Blurring - compression of optic nerve
- Obscurations - transient blindness upon bending or posture changes
- Papilloedema - defined as optic disk swelling secondary to a rise in intracranial pressure
- Optic nerve has CSF around it, this shifting CSF compresses optic nerve and causes optic disk swelling
- CN VI palsy - problem with lateral rectus muscle
- Originates and hooks around pons
- First nerve to be compressed in high ICP as it runs close to skull
- Retinal haemorrhages if the rise in ICP has been rapid
State the types of herniation syndromes in raised ICP
- Subfalcine herniation
- Uncal herniation
- Tonsillar herniation
Describe subfalcine herniations
- Most common
- Asymptomatic but could have headaches and contralateral leg weakness if anterior cerebral artery compressed
- Midline shift on CT
Describe uncal herniation
- Uncus displaced across tentorial opening
- As the herniation progresses, the uncus puts pressure on the midbrain
- Ipsilateral oculomotor nerve - ipsilateral dilated pupil due to loss of parasympathetics along CN III
- Compression of cerebral peduncle - contralateral motor weakness
- Decreased level of consciousness - compress reticular formation within brainstem
Describe tonsillar herniation
- Cerebellar tonsils herniate through the foramen magnum
- Compression of medulla and upper spinal cord
- Brainstem affected - cardiac and respiratory dysfunction
- Decreased level of consciousness
Describe Cushing’s reflex and its presentation
- Occurs if raised ICP is not treated and continues to rise, leading to destruction of the brainstem
- Triad - high blood pressure, bradycardia, low respiratory rate (opposite to septic patient)
- If untreated, leads to death
Describe the pathophysiology of Cushing’s reflex
- Ischaemia at medulla -> sympathetic activation -> rise in blood pressure + tachycardia -> baroreceptors react -> bradycardia
- When oxygen taken away, sodium levels within the cell rise due to loss of Na/K - leading to sympathetic activation
- Ischaemia at pons/medulla at respiratory centres -> low respiratory rate
- Increased firing of vagal neurones
Describe the causes or raised ICP
- Increased cerebral blood volume
- Venous outflow obstruction
- Venous sinus thrombosis
- Cerebral oedema
- Meningitis, encephalitis
- Diffuse head injury
- Infarction
- Increased CSF
- Impaired absorption - hydrocephalus, benign intracranial hypertension
- Excessive secretion - choroid plexus papilloma
- Expanding mass (space occupying lesions)
- Abscess
- Tumour
- Haemorrhage / haematoma
Define hydrocephalus
Accumulation of CSF due to imbalance between production and absorption of CSF leading to enlargement of brain ventricles
Describe non-communicating hydrocephalus
- Non-communicating/obstructive - CSF is obstructed within the ventricles or between the ventricles and subarachnoid space
- Most commonly due to aqueduct block
- Also due to tumours - eg. Meningioma