• Acta Neurochir. Suppl. · Jan 2002

    Intracranial compliance as a bed-side monitoring technique in severely head-injured patients.

    • K L Kiening, W N Schoening, W R Lanksch, and A W Unterberg.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Charité, Virchow Medical Center Humboldt-University at Berlin, Germany.
    • Acta Neurochir. Suppl. 2002 Jan 1;81:177-80.

    AbstractA recently developed monitoring technology makes an on-line assessment of intracranial compliance (ICC) possible. Aims of our research: 1. Course and values of ICC (critical threshold: < 0.5 ml/mmHg) in episodes of pathological intracranial pressure (ICP) (> 20 mmHg) and reduced cerebral oxygenation (brain tissue PO2 (PtiO2) < 10 mmHg). 2. Mean ICC in different ages. 3. Relationship between ICC and outcome. 4. Evaluation of ICC as routine monitoring parameter by calculation of s.c. time-of-good-data-quality (TGDQ). Computer data assessment of 7 patients with severe closed head-injury was performed providing 830 hours of data. TGDQ resulted from the formula: TGDQ (%) = artifact free time (min) x 100 (%)/total monitoring time (min). Outcome was assessed 6 months posttrauma (Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS). 1. Analysis revealed 43 episodes of pathologically elevated ICP and 39 of critical ICC. In 17 cases overlapping periods were found. In 9 of these ICC preceded ICP. Reduced cerebral oxygenation was neither related with high ICP nor low ICC. 2. ICC was found to be age-related. At a cut-off-point of 20 mmHg in ICP, ICC in children (< or = 16 years) was 0.9, in adults (17-60 years) 0.7 and in elderly (> 60 years) 0.6 ml/mmHg. 3. Adverse outcome was indicated best by high ICP (up to 45% of monitoring time) followed by low ICC (up to 41% of monitoring time). 4. TGDQ in ICC was 72% compared to 95% in ICP and 98% in PtiO2. In predicting adverse outcome, ICP was equal to ICC. The different ICC in each age class points to the need of age-adjusted thresholds. Further refinements of ICC technology are needed to improve ICC data quality and therefore become a useful tool in neuromonitoring.

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