Simultaneous continuous recording of intracranial pressure (ICP) and systemic blood pressure was carried out in 26 patients admitted within 1 week after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) due to a ruptured intracranial aneurysm. The patients were graded as described by Hunt and Hess. Recordings were made for 1 to 5 days. The more impaired the consciousness, the higher the rate of ICP. In Grade III, IV, and V patients, the mean ICP level was in the range of 15 to 40 mm Hg, 30 to 75 mm Hg, and exceeded 75 mm Hg, respectively. A definite correlation between vasospasm shown by cerebral arteriogram and the clinical grade was not observed. In our series of ICP recordings, we never observed a typical plateau wave. The variations of ICP seen in Grade III and IV patients were the B- and C-waves (15 to 45 mm Hg in amplitude) described by Lundberg, and those in Grade V patients were the high amplitude monotonous waves synchronous with the arterial pulses (15 to 40 mm Hg in amplitude). These phenomena may indicate that Grade III and IV patients with SAH are in a condition of cerebral vasomotor instability, and Grade V patients have cerebral vasomotor paralysis.
Intracranial pressure (ICP) was recorded continuously in 12 pre-operative patients with angiographic evidence of diffuse cerebral arterial spasm due to a ruptured intracranial aneurysm. Recordings were made for 1 to 7 days, starting within 13 days after the haemorrhage. 1. An increased ICP was observed in the first week after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) in 4 of the patients without any signs of angiographic arterial spasm. 2. This initial increase was regularly followed by a depression of ICP in between 7--12 days after SAH. In 11 out of 12 patients such a depression was concomitant with the beginning of arterial spasm. During the period of depressed ICP pattern, 6 patients showed little or no neurological deterioration, whereas 5 patients showed impaired consciousness or neurological deficits. 3. A secondary rise of ICP thereafter always followed due to ischaemic brain swelling or infarction, and was usually associated with a serious neurological deterioration. 4. Continuous ventricular drainage was performed to control the secondary increased ICP in 7 patients who survived, 4 of them with good clinical improvement and 3 with severe neurological deficits. 5. In the stage of depressed ICP, the administration of isoproterenol and steroids is recommended in order to try to alleviate the secondary rise of ICP.
Intracranial pressure (ICP) was continuously recorded, isotope cisternography was performed, and the ventricular system size was evaluated on serial computerized tomography scans in 39 patients. All of these patients had communicating hydrocephalus after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) from rupture of an intracranial aneurysm. The studies were carried out in both the acute stage (within 7 days after SAH) and the communicating hydrocephalus stage. In patients in the acute stage who had no ventricular dilatation, but who later developed communicating hydrocephalus, the resting ICP was high, and an ICP pattern of B-wave activity was seen; there was no delay in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) absorption on isotope cisternography. Patients with communicating hydrocephalus in whom ICP recordings were started within 63 days after SAH had a pattern of plateau waves in conjunction with B-waves, and there was a marked delay in CSF circulation. In general, patients with higher resting ICP's had more frequent ICP irregularities. Patients with communicating hydrocephalus in whom recordings were begun more than 6 months after SAH had a low and flat ICP pattern, and there was no delay in CSF absorption in spite of bilateral convexity blocks on isotope cisternography. The results suggest that the ICP pattern of plateau waves in conjunction with B-waves can be regarded as a sign of delayed CSF absorption; hence, shunting procedures may be indicated in patients with plateau waves in conjunction with B-waves visualized on continuous ICP recordings.
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