10.2 raised Intracranial pressure Flashcards

1
Q

what does cranial pressure have to be over to be considered high?

A

> 20 mmHg

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2
Q

if ICP is high, how will is show in a lumbar puncture?

A

CSF will pump out with heart beat

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3
Q

what can cause raised ICP?

A
  • raised arterial pressure
  • raised venous pressure e.g SVC obstruction
  • haemorrhage (most common)
  • hydrocephalus = congenital or acquired e.g meningitis, trauma, haemorrhage, tumour (too much CSF)
  • cerebral oedema (too much brain)
  • tumour
  • abscess
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4
Q

what are some congenital obstructions to CSF flow?

A
  • neural tube defects e.g spina bifida
  • aqueduct stenosis

communicating hydrocephalus

  • increased CSF production
  • decreased CSF absorption
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5
Q

why is congenital hydrocephalus not bad in babies?

A

as fontanelles can move apart and make space for increased CSF so pressure doesn’t go up as quickly like it would in an adult

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6
Q

what is a external ventricular drain and what are the advantages and disadvantages?

A

allows short-medium term drainage of lateral ventricles and continuous pressure monitoring

disadvantages are its a direct pathway for bacteria from the skin into the brain, chamber must be at the same hight as the ventricles and is not a good long term solution

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7
Q

what is a ventricle peritoneal shunt?

A

shunts fluid from ventricles to peritoneum

easy to place but prone to infections and can kink, block or displace

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8
Q

what are the 4 types of cerebral oedema?

A

vasogenic - breakdown of tight endothelial junctions at BBB

interstitial - rupture of BBB = csf spreads to interstitial spaces

osmotic - higher osmolality in brain compared to serum

cytotoxic - intracellular retention of sodium and water

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9
Q

how can you calculate cerebral perfusion pressure?

A

CPP = MAP - ICP

cerebral perfusion pressure =
mean arterial pressure - intracranial pressure

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10
Q

what are the steps of cushings triad?

A

occurs in steps:
1) raised mean arterial pressure

2) bradycardia - increased in BP is sensed so HR is lowered is lowered by baroreceptors

(can get a bushings ulcer alongside)

3) irregular breathing - herniation of cerebellar tonsils due to raised ICP via foramen magnum = impinge on breathing nuclei centres on brainstem.

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11
Q

what are the early signs of raised ICP?

A

Headache - present on waking, worse on bending and coughing. constant

nausea and vomiting

difficulty concentrating or drowsiness, confusion

double vision - worse eyesight and papilloedema

focal neurological signs

seizures - may be experienced as blackouts

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12
Q

what can you use to treat raised ICP?

A

mannitol - a sugar. will draw fluid out of brain into bloodstream. also a diuretic so you’ll wee it out (3% hypertonic saline does the same, just salt)

also, an external ventricular drain

if all else fails, a decompressive craniotomy

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13
Q

what are the types of brain herniation?

A

1) cerebellar herniation
2) sub falcon herniation - beneath faux cerebri
3) unveil herniation
4) central downwards herniation
5) external herniation through open skull fracture

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