Journal of neurosurgery
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Journal of neurosurgery · Dec 1988
Changes in CSF pressure after mannitol in patients with and without elevated CSF pressure.
In view of the current concern that rapid infusion of mannitol might initially aggravate intracranial hypertension, the effects of a mannitol infusion on lumbar cerebrospinal fluid pressure (CSFP) were investigated in 49 patients. The studies were performed when the patients were under general anesthesia prior to elective craniotomy for tumor resection or intracerebral aneurysm clipping. The patients were divided into two groups: 24 patients with normal CSFP (Group I, mean CSFP 10.5 mm Hg) and 25 with raised CSFP (Group II, mean CSFP 20.8 mm Hg). ⋯ The CBV increased approximately 25% over control values after mannitol infusion both in the normal animals and in those with CSFP raised by an epidural balloon. The response of the CSFP to mannitol infusion differed between both groups in a fashion similar to that observed in the human subjects. Thus, differences in CBV changes after mannitol do not account for the difference in CSFP response between normal subjects and those with raised CSFP.