Neurosurgery JC027: Raised Intracranial Pressure And Hydrocephalus Flashcards

1
Q

Intracranial pressure (ICP)

A
  • Created by Arterial inflow to brain
  • Measured at External auditory meatus (~ same level with Foramen Monro)
  • Measured by Ventricular / Lumbar puncture
  • Adult: ***10-15 mmHg
  • Infant: 1-6 mmHg (∵ unfused fontanelle / skull sutures —> ICP subject to atm pressure)

ICP waveform (no need to know):
- Follows arterial pulsation
- P1: Arterial pulse
- P2: Vaguely related cerebral compliance
- P3: Aortic valve closure, Dicrotic notch

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2
Q

Common causes of ↑ ICP

A
  1. ***Space-occupying mass lesion
    - Haematoma (e.g. ICH)
    - Tumour
    - Abscess
  2. ***Hydrocephalus
    - ∵ excessive accumulation of CSF
    - communicating / non-communicating
  3. ***Brain swelling (∵ injury e.g. infarction)
    - focal / diffuse
  4. Hyperaemia
  5. Venous congestion
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3
Q

Clinical features of ↑ ICP

A
  1. **Headache
    - worse on **
    supine > erect (∵ ↑ arterial pressure going into head, ↓ venous drainage from brain)
    - worse early morning (can wake patient up)
  2. ***Vomiting
    - might transiently relieve headache (∵ hyperventilation)
  3. ***Blurring of vision + diplopia (CN6)
    - brainstem compression, CN palsy
  4. Deterioration in consciousness
  5. ***Papilloedema (late)
    - ∵ extension of CSF space into CN2 —> inhibit axoplasmic flow, venous congestion
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4
Q

Monro-Kellie-Burrows Doctrine

A

Adult skull:
- a rigid box with Brain + Blood + CSF
- mass lesion initially displaces Venous blood + CSF —> leave skull to accommodate Brain —> when exhaust (no more buffer) —> ICP ↑ rapidly

ICP vs Space-occupying lesion volume curve:
- High —> Low —> No compliance
- Initial SOL ↑ —> ICP not ↑ much (∵ Compensation by Venous + CSF outflow)
- SOL continue to ↑ (exhaust buffer) —> ICP ↑ rapidly (∵ Decompensation —> Death)

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5
Q

↑ ICP and Cerebral ischaemia

A

2 equations:
1. CPP = ***MAP - ICP
2. CBF = CPP / CVR

CBF ∝ CPP
CBF inversely ∝ Cerebral vascular resistance
CBF = CPP / CVR (~50)

ICP ↑ by:
- Intracranial bleeding
- Cerebral edema
- Tumour

ICP ↑ effect:
- Collapses vein
- ↓ Effective CPP
- ↓ CBF

CPP: Cerebral perfusion pressure (Normal: 60-80 mmHg)
MAP: Mean arterial pressure
ICP: Intracranial pressure
CVP: Central venous pressure
CBF: Cerebral bloodflow (Normal: 50 ml / min / 100g tissue)

Aim: CPP ***~60-70 mmHg

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6
Q

Brain cell don’t like Ischaemia

A
  • ***Obligatory aerobic respiration
  • Can only use glucose (ketones in emergency but not efficient)
  • Injured neurons can’t recycle lactate —> Lactic acidosis (harmful to brain cells)
  • Vicious cycles of **Biochemical + **Cellular responses (e.g. inflammatory cells infiltration)
  • **Glutamate release (Excitotoxicity), **Ca influx, Energy failure, DNA damage —> Rapid cell death

Pathophysiology:
↓ CBF
—> ↓ ATP formation —> Failure of Na/K-ATPase pump —> Lose ionic gradient
—> Dysregulated depolarisation of presynaptic neurons **↑ Ca
—> **
Excessive release of neurotransmitter Glutamate
—> Excitotoxicity

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7
Q

Effects of Cerebral Ischaemia

A

Threshold exist for CBF

  1. Ischaemic threshold
    - CBF: 12-18
    - EEG changes: Increasingly **Slower frequency (1-4 Hz))
    - **
    Na/K-ATPase failure
    - ↑ Intracellular H2O
  2. Infarction threshold
    - CBF: <12
    - EEG changes: **Suppressed
    - **
    Ca accumulation
    - ***Anoxic (uncontrollable) depolarisation
    - Cell death
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8
Q

Vicious cycle of Ischaemia and Brain swelling

A

Vicious cycle:
↑ ICP —> ↓ CBF —> Ischaemia —> Swelling —> ↑ ICP

Vasogenic edema (Swelling in **extracellular space)
Injury
—> Inflammation, Oxidative stress, Glial activation, Physical impact
—> **
BBB disruption
—> ***Extravasation of fluid + serum proteins into extracellular space

Cytotoxic edema (Swelling of **brain cells)
Injury
—> ATP depletion, Mitochondrial dysfunction, Oxidative stress
—> Disruption of intra-extracellular ion balance (Failure of Na/K-ATPase pump —> Lose ionic gradient)
—> **
Astrocytic swelling

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9
Q

Brain herniation / Coning

A

Normal: Basal cistern is patent (“smiling”) (pocket of CSF: space between brainstem and skull base)

Herniation: Basal cistern obliterated

Types:
1. Subfalcine (Cingulate)
2. **Central (Tentorial) (成個大腦落小腦 via Tentorial hiatus —> Brainstem compression)
3. Transcalvarial (External)
4. **
Uncal (Transtentorial) (Temporal lobe downward via Tentorial hiatus —> Brainstem compression)
5. ***Tonsillar (Downward cerebellar via Foramen Magnum —> Medulla compression: Respiratory centre)
6. Upward

Central + Tonsillar type most important —> Respiratory centre compressed

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10
Q

Terminal stage of ↑ ICP: Cushing reflex

A
  • Combination of Sympathetic + Parasympathetic activation
  • ***Cushing Triad:
    1. HT (∵ peripheral vasoconstriction)
    2. Bradycardia (reflex to HT) (initially tachycardic ∵ sympathetic activation)
    3. Irregular respiration (rapid + shallow + ineffective)
  • ***Cushing ulcer (∵ excessive gastric acid production by uncontrolled activation of parietal cells ∵ parasympathetic activation)
  • Other focal signs: Fixed dilated pupil (CN3 palsy due to Uncal herniation) etc.

End result:
Cardiac arrest —> Death

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11
Q

Glasgow Coma Score (GCS)

A
  • Objective + Reproducible way to assess consciousness
  • Initial GCS: ***Prognostic
  • Post-resuscitation GCS is highly prognostic
  • ***Trend reflects deterioration / improvement
  • Quantitative (3-15) but ***NOT a linear scale

Classification of Brain injury:
- 13-15: Mild, LOC <30 mins
- 9-12: Moderate, LOC >30 mins, <24 hours
- <8: Severe, LOC >24 hours

3 Components:
Eye opening (E1-4) (try to wake up by calling patient by name)
- 4: spontaneous
- 3: to speech
- 2: to pain
- 1: none

Verbal response (V1-5)
- 5: orientated (in person, space, time)
- 4: confused
- 3: inappropriate words
- 2: incomprehensible sounds
- 1: none

Motor response (M1-6) (cortical —> subcortical response) (elicit pain by pricking at Trigeminal region (∵ straight to brainstem))
- 6: obey commands (intact cortical function: able to understand + execute)
- 5: localises to pain (very significant drop, but pyramidal tract still intact, know where the pain is)
- 4: flexion / withdrawal to pain (less precise pyramidal tract function)
- 3: **abnormal flexion (extrapyramidal tract response)
- 2: **
extend
- 1: none

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12
Q

Motor score (M)

A
  • Indicative of **extent of injury + **prognostic
  • Painful stimuli over CNV territory
    —> Sternal rub
    —> Press on supraorbital ridge
    —> Pinch on earlobe
  • Best response of limbs

M5: UL raised ***above clavicle
- Unconscious behaviour
- Basal ganglia / Internal capsule level

M4: UL withdraw but not above clavicle
- Unconscious behaviour
- Basal ganglia / Internal capsule level

M3: **Decorticate posture, injury to **corticospinal tract above midbrain
- Lesion above red nucleus, below cortex (e.g. Diencephalon)
—> Rubrospinal tract intact
—> UL flexion remains

M2: Decerebrate posture, injury to **midbrain / upper pons
- Lesion between Red nucleus (midbrain) and Vestibular nucleus (medulla) (
More extensive involvement of brainstem: **Autonomic functions disrupted which is bad)
—> Rubrospinal tract cut off
—> Un-opposed extensor activities of Reticular (Reticulospinal) and Vestibular nuclei (Vestibulospinal tract) from lower brainstem
—> UL extension (worse prognosis)

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13
Q

Pitfalls of GCS

A

1.
E: **Swollen eyes, Loss of eye post-trauma
M: **
Spinal cord injury, Limb injury, Muscle relaxant (Alternative: Tongue protrusion)
V: Language barrier, ***Intubation, Tracheostomy (VT)

  1. Total score can mean many things
  2. Effect of ***shock (impair brain function)
    - use Post-resuscitation GCS
  3. Effect of ***sedative drugs e.g. for mechanical ventilation
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14
Q

ICP Monitoring

A

Normal (Adults): 10-15 mmHg

Indications:
1. **No reliable GCS (e.g. sedation, muscle paralysis for ventilation)
2. **
GCS <=8 (require intubation)
3. ***Evolving disease conditions
(4. Abnormal CT scan
5. Normal CT scan with >=2 risk factors:
- Age >40
- SBP <90
- Unilateral / Bilateral motor signs)

Relative contraindications:
- Awake patients
- Bleeding tendency

Methods:
1. **Clinical (i.e. GCS score)
2. **
External Ventricular Drain (EVD) (Gold standard)
3. ***LP
(4. Subdural
5. Parenchymal (Microsensor))

EVD use:
1. Monitor ICP
2. Drain CSF to ↓ ICP

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15
Q

External Ventricular Drain (EVD) vs Lumbar puncture

A
  • Manometric principle for monitoring Intracranial CSF pressure
    —> Drainage of ***Lateral ventricle
    —> Manometer at external auditory meatus level
  • ***Therapeutic by draining CSF for decompression
  • Risk of **infection, iatrogenic **trauma

Lumbar puncture:
- CI if **↑ ICP (with exception: **Communicating Hydrocephalus) —> Pressure gradient push brain downward

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16
Q

Clinical management of ↑ ICP

A

Fundamentals:
1. Protect uninjured brain
2. Salvage injured brain
3. Treat underlying cause

Rule:
1. Always resuscitate first
- Airway, Breathing (protect C-spine), Circulation (IV volume), Disability, Exposure / Environment
- **ABC before ICP!!!
2. Clinical / ICP monitoring
3. **
Control ICP + Maintain cerebral perfusion
4. Neuroprotective therapies

17
Q

***Treatment of ↑ ICP

A

Any doctor:
1. **Head elevation (30o) (facilitate venous drainage)
2. **
Optimise ventilation (Hyperventilation: PaCO2 ~3-3.5 kPa)
3. **Maintain MAP (CPP ~60-70 mmHg)
4. **
Osmotherapy (Mannitol, Loop diuretic, Hypertonic saline)
5. **Sedation
6. Optimise electrolyte / glucose level
7. **
Prevent / Control seizure
8. Prevent pyrexia

By neurosurgeon / ICU:
1. **EVD: ICP monitoring + CSF drainage
2. **
Controlled hyperventilation
3. Barbiturate coma
4. **Craniostomy
5. **
Surgical removal of SOL (Craniotomy)
6. ***Decompressive craniectomy

18
Q

Enhance Cerebral Venous Drainage

A
  1. Head elevation ~30o (angle too large will compromise MAP, CPP)
  2. Avoid neck rotation
  3. Remove neck collar if not indicated
  4. Maintain vascular volume + BP
19
Q

BP control can be tricky

A

Normally: Vasoreactivity will maintain stable CBF (even if BP ↑)
- Pressure active: ↑ MAP —> Vasoconstriction (to maintain stable CBF) —> ↓ Cerebral blood volume —> ↓ ICP
- 太多血會收縮減少血流

Brain injury: impaired Vasoreactivity
- Pressure passive: ↑ MAP —> ↑ Cerebral blood volume —> ↑ ICP
- 太多血但唔識收縮減少血流

Aim: CPP ***~60-70 mmHg

20
Q

Hyperventilation

A
  • No blind hyperventilation!
  • To buy time e.g. on way to OT

Principle:
- ↓ CO2 —> ↑ Vasoconstriction (減少血流到腦) —> ↓ Cerebral blood volume —> ↓ ICP

BUT at the same time
**CBF = CPP / CVR
- ↑ Vasoconstriction —> ↑ CPP (∵ ↓ ICP) but ↑↑ CVR (rmb ∵ r^4) —> ↓↓ CBF —> **
Cerebral Ischaemia

Aim: PaCO2 ***~3-3.5 kPa

***DO NOT:
- Prophylactic
- Prolonged
- Without ↑ ICP
- Without monitoring
- Stop suddenly —> rebound phenomenon

21
Q

Other Preventions

A
  1. Hypoglycaemia
    - seizure
    - brain injury
  2. Hyperglycaemia
    - lactic acidosis
  3. Seizure
    - ↑ metabolic demand —> Hyperaemia —> ↑ brain swelling
    - Treatment: ***Phenytoin (loading + infusion)
  4. Electrolyte imbalance
  5. Fever
  6. Osmotherapy
    - **Mannitol (100 ml 20% IV STAT)
    —> Osmotic effect (need intact BBB), ↓ Blood viscosity (unknown mechanism), ↑ CBF —> vasoconstriction (by autoregulation) —> ↓ CBV
    —> Foley’s catheter (to monitor output)
    —> SE (Diuresis): **
    ↓ Vascular volume, **Haemoconcentration, **Renal failure
    —> CI: **Shock, **HyperNa (∵ blood further concentrated by mannitol)
    - **Loop diuretic
    - **
    Hypertonic saline (better in multiple injured patients?)
    —> Osmotic effect but no diuresis effect like Mannitol (i.e. not ↓ Vascular volume)
  7. Glucocorticoids
    - Anti-inflammatory effect
    - Effective for **Vasogenic edema (e.g. Peri-tumoural edema)
    - **
    Absolute CI in Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
    —> Complex heterogenous pathophysiology
    —> ↑ Mortality
    - ***Questionable in Stroke
  8. **Barbiturate coma
    - Done in ICU
    - Very very deep anaesthesia —> Switch off brain cells
    - Aim at “Burst suppression” —> **
    ↓ Metabolic demand
    - Need EEG monitoring
    - ↓ Neuronal activities —> ↓ Metabolic demand
    - ↓ CBF —> ↓ ICP
    - SE: **myocardial depression, **hypotension
  9. Therapeutic hypothermia
    - Early cooling to **32-34oC
    - Neuroprotection by:
    —> ↓ Brain metabolic rate
    —> ↓ ATP consumption, ↓ O2 demand
    —> ↓ Cell death cascades
    - Established for **
    Post-cardiac arrest brain injury
    - Controversial in Stroke / Trauma
    - SE: Pneumonia, Coagulopathy (may worsen bleeding in trauma cases)
22
Q

Surgical treatment

A
  1. External Ventricular Drain (EVD)
    - release CSF with / without overt hydrocephalus
    - ICP monitoring
  2. Craniostomy (Burr hole)
    - drainage of superficial fluid collection e.g. chronic subdural haematoma (clot has already haemolysed to become fluid)
    - not drain solid clot very well
  3. Craniotomy (Skull flap raised + replaced)
    - haematoma / tumour removal
  4. Decompressive Craniectomy
    - for severe brain swelling
    - bone flap **not replaced
    - effective in ↓ ICP + mortality
    - **
    massive infarction / post-TBI brain swelling
    - but do not correct underlying primary pathology (i.e. swelling)
    - quality of survival variable
    - ethical + philosophical issues
23
Q

CSF

A

Production:
- Choroid plexus in ventricles
- ***450 ml/day in adults

Absorption:
- Arachnoid granulations at Dura venous sinuses

Flow:
Lateral ventricles
—> Foramen Monro
—> 3rd Ventricle
—> ***Aqueduct
—> 4th Ventricle
—> Foramen Luschka, Magendie
—> Subarachnoid space (spinal cord, around brain)
—> reabsorbed at Arachnoid villi

Hydrocephalus occurs if:
1. ↑ Production
2. Flow obstruction
3. ↓ Absorption

24
Q

Common causes of Hydrocephalus

A

3 causes:
1. ↑ Production
2. Flow obstruction
3. ↓ Absorption

Congenital
- **Aqueductal stenosis
- **
Atresia of various foramina
- Arnold-Chiari malformation
- Dandy-Walker syndrome
- Neural tube defect
- Congenital infection
- Congenital mass lesions

Acquired
- ↑ CSF production (e.g. choroidal plexus papilloma (rare))
- **Flow obstruction (e.g. tumour, haematoma)
- **
↓ Absorption (e.g. meningitis, SAH —> inflammation of arachnoid villi)
- Idiopathic

25
Q

Clinical presentation of Hydrocephalus

A

Depends on:
- age
- cause
- chronicity
- brain compliance
- etc.

***Progression:
- Insidious onset / Rapidly fatal

Infants:
1. **Large head
2. **
Sunset eyes
3. **Dilated scalp veins
4. **
Tense fontanelle
5. Irritability
6. Developmental delay

Adults:
1. **↑ ICP symptoms (Headache, Vomiting)
2. **
Motor deficit
3. ***Cognitive dysfunction
4. Urinary incontinence
5. Drowsiness
6. Coma

26
Q

Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus (NPH)

A

ICP **not high despite large ventricles (i.e. CSF accumulation)
- Complex pathophysiology of **
abnormal brain compliance
- ***NO ↑ ICP symptoms (e.g. headache, vomit)

Classic clinical triad:
1. **Gait disturbance (∵ descending pyramidal tracts of lower limb go around frontal horn of lateral ventricles got stretched)
2. **
Cognitive decline (∵ frontal lobe affected)
3. **Urinary incontinence (∵ frontal lobe affected)
—> Look like **
Alzheimer’s disease (enlarged ventricles as well)

  • ***Responds well to CSF diversion / shunting
  • Need to distinguish from other causes of dementia e.g. AD, Cerebral atrophy which do NOT respond to shunting
27
Q

Diagnosis of Hydrocephalus

A
  1. Clinical suspicion
  2. Imaging
    - ***Ventricular dilatation (Evans ratio: Diameter of frontal horn / Biparietal diameter >=0.3)
    - Change in morphology, periventricular edema
  3. MRI CSF studies
  4. ***LP
    - measures CSF pressure
    - trial drainage but be careful!
  5. EVD (rarely)
28
Q

Communicating vs Non-communicating Hydrocephalus

A

Communicating Hydrocephalus:
e.g. SAH
—> Damaged subarachnoid villi (Ventricles still communicating with Subarachnoid space)
—> LP also drains CSF in ventricles
—> do not create pressure gradient between skull / spine
—> LP is diagnostic + therapeutic
(***Both 4th + 3rd ventricles are dilated (SpC Revision))

Non-communicating Hydrocephalus
e.g. Colloid cyst in 3th Ventricle / Cerebellar tumour / 4th ventricular obstruction
Blockage of CSF flow between Ventricles / Subarachnoid space
—> If decompress spine CSF space
—> Ventricular pressure remain high
—> Pressure gradient created between skull / spine
—> Coning
—> LP absolutely contraindicated + lethal
(***Only 3rd ventricles is dilated, 4th ventricle is small (SpC Revision))

29
Q

***Treatment of Hydrocephalus

A
  1. ABC (always first)
  2. Temporising measures
    - **LP if communicating
    - **
    EVD if doubt / unstable / evolving condition
  3. Definitive measures
    - **CSF shunting (e.g. ventriculo-peritoneal VP, ventriculo-atrial VA)
    - **
    Endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV)
    - ***Treat underlying cause (e.g. haematoma, tumour removal)
30
Q

CSF Shunting

A
  • VP / VA shunt
  • one-way valve to control CSF flow

Complications:
1. **Infection (primary / secondary)
2. Blockage —> recurrent hydrocephalus
3. Dislodgement / Fracture —> recurrent hydrocephalus
4. **
Over-shunting (drainage too quick)
- **Intracranial hypotension: worse headache when sitting up
- **
CSDH (Chronic subdural haemorrhage: veins being torn by negative pressure)
5. Abdominal pseudocyst
6. **Slit ventricle syndrome (in children)
- skull do not grow (∵ brain not expanding) —> once shunt blocked —> ICP ↑
- ventricular wall is stiff also —> do not expand adequately
7. **
Nephritis (VA, ∵ immune complex)
8. ***Bowel perforation (VP)

Key message: Avoid shunting if possible!

Common scenarios:
1. Recurrent hydrocephalus symptom
- consider blocked shunt —> test shunt

  1. ↑ ICP symptom +/- Focal deficit
    - CSDH (e.g. elderly on aspirin)
  2. Postural headache (worse when erect)
    - Intracranial hypotension (e.g. over-shunting without CSDH)
  3. Fever + abdominal pain
    - Shunt infection causing peritonitis?
    - Peritonitis causing shunt infection?
    - Externalise shunt + Antibiotics
31
Q

Programmable CSF shunt

A
  • Allows post-op transcutaneous adjustment of shunt valve setting using magnets
  • Tailored to individual patients’ needs
  • Affected by external magnetic field —> check before / after MRI
32
Q

Endoscopic Third Ventriculostomy (ETV)

A

Fenestrate floor of 3rd ventricle
—> CSF flow directly from 3rd ventricle into Subarachnoid space
—> bypass obstruction and restore CSF flow
—> avoid permanent shunting
—> enable tumour biopsy

33
Q

Summary of Key messages

A
  • ↑ ICP can have insidious onset / rapidly fatal
  • CPP = MAP - ICP (~60-80)
  • CBF = CPP / CVR (~50)
  • GCS = E(4) + V(5) + M(6) (3-15)
  • ICP monitoring when GCS unreliable / evolving condition (GCS <=8 as intubation / sedation required)
  • ABC before ICP
  • Steroids for tumour but ***NOT TBI / stroke
  • ***No prophylactic / prolonged / uncontrolled hyperventilation
  • ***No mannitol when shocked
  • No LP if ↑ ICP unless absolutely sure Communicating hydrocephalus