Search results for "intracranial pressure"

showing 10 items of 82 documents

Time sequence and site of fluid accumulation in experimental neurogenic pulmonary edema.

1976

The initial phase of pulmonary edema development following intracranial pressure elevation was studied by means of transmission electron microscopy. Using perfusion fixation and application of a blood tracer (HRP horseradish peroxidase) the time sequence and site of fluid leakage out of pulmonary vessels was demonstrated: - passage of edema fluid through intercellular clefts of alveolar capillary endothelium - edema accumulation in alveolar interstitial tissue - draining of edema fluid from the alveolar septum to the interstitium of terminal bronchioli and to lymphatic vessels. An early interepithelial fluid leakage out of the alveolar wall remains questionable.

MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsIntracranial PressurePulmonary EdemaHorseradish peroxidaseCapillary PermeabilityEdemamedicineAnimalsCraniocerebral TraumaLungHorseradish PeroxidaseFixation (histology)Alveolar WallbiologyChemistryAlveolar septumGeneral MedicineAnatomyrespiratory systemPulmonary edemamedicine.diseaseCapillariesRatsPulmonary AlveoliMicroscopy ElectronLymphatic systemIntercellular Junctionsbiology.proteinmedicine.symptomPerfusionResearch in experimental medicine. Zeitschrift fur die gesamte experimentelle Medizin einschliesslich experimenteller Chirurgie
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Hypertonic fluid resuscitation from subarachnoid hemorrhage in rats: A comparison between small volume resuscitation and mannitol

2005

Abstract Objective Death and severe morbidity after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) are mainly caused by global cerebral ischemia through increased intracranial pressure (ICP) and decreased cerebral blood flow (CBF). We have recently demonstrated neuroprotective effects of small volume resuscitation (7.5% saline in combination with 6% dextran 70) in an animal model of SAH, leading to normalization of increased ICP, reduced morphological damage and improved neurological recovery. In the present study, we compared the concept of small volume resuscitation represented by two clinically licenced hypertonic–hyperoncotic saline solutions with the routinely used hyperosmotic agent–mannitol–and inves…

MaleResuscitationTime FactorsSubarachnoid hemorrhageIntracranial PressureResuscitationmedicine.medical_treatmentHypertonic SolutionsFunctional LateralityRandom AllocationmedicineAnimalsMannitolcardiovascular diseasesRats WistarSalineIntracranial pressureNeurologic Examinationbusiness.industryDextransSubarachnoid Hemorrhagemedicine.diseaseRatsnervous system diseasesDextran 70Hypertonic salineDisease Models AnimalNeurologyCerebral blood flowCerebrovascular CirculationAnesthesiaTonicityNeurology (clinical)businessJournal of the Neurological Sciences
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A historical case of beaten-copper cranium

2007

The authors present the oldest historical case of a so-called beaten-copper cranium. The typical pattern was identified on a skull from a child, probably a boy, who died at approximately 6 years of age and was buried in a provisional cemetery used during the siege of Hanau, Germany, in 1635 and 1636. Morphological and radiological analyses of the severe digitate impressions ubiquitous on the child's endocranium support the diagnosis of chronically elevated intracranial pressure due to hydrocephalus.

MaleWarfaremedicine.medical_specialty10017 Institute of AnatomyPediatric neurosurgeryMortuary Practice610 Medicine & healthHistory 17th CenturyGermanyEndocraniummedicineHumansElevated Intracranial PressureChildIntracranial pressureSiegebusiness.industrySkullGeneral MedicineAnatomymedicine.disease2746 SurgerySurgeryHydrocephalusSkull2728 Neurology (clinical)medicine.anatomical_structureStarvationChronic Disease11294 Institute of Evolutionary Medicine570 Life sciences; biologybusinessHydrocephalusJournal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics
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Xenon Improves Neurologic Outcome and Reduces Secondary Injury Following Trauma in an In Vivo Model of Traumatic Brain Injury*

2014

Objectives: To determine the neuroprotective efficacy of the inert gas xenon following traumatic brain injury and to determine whether application of xenon has a clinically relevant therapeutic time window. Design: Controlled animal study. Setting: University research laboratory. Subjects: Male C57BL/6N mice (n = 196). Interventions: Seventy-five percent xenon, 50% xenon, or 30% xenon, with 25% oxygen (balance nitrogen) treatment following mechanical brain lesion by controlled cortical impact. Measurements and Main Results: Outcome following trauma was measured using 1) functional neurologic outcome score, 2) histological measurement of contusion volume, and 3) analysis of locomotor functio…

MaleXenonINTRACRANIAL-PRESSURE1110 NursingCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicineGAIT ABNORMALITIESXenonGaitIntracranial pressureintegumentary systemBrainGLYCINE SITEINTRACEREBRAL-HEMORRHAGED-ASPARTATE RECEPTORNeuroprotective AgentsTreatment OutcomeAnesthesiahead traumaneuroprotectionLife Sciences & BiomedicinePOTASSIUM CHANNELSLocomotioncirculatory and respiratory physiologyinorganic chemicalsTraumatic brain injurychemistry.chemical_elementNeuroprotection1117 Public Health and Health ServicesHead traumaCritical Care MedicineIn vivoGeneral & Internal MedicineAdministration InhalationmedicineAnimalscardiovascular diseasesIntracerebral hemorrhageScience & Technologybusiness.industry1103 Clinical Sciencesbrain injurymedicine.diseaseCONTROLLED CORTICAL IMPACTCOMPETITIVE-INHIBITIONEmergency & Critical Care MedicineMice Inbred C57BLDisease Models AnimalCOGNITIVE DEFICITSchemistryBrain InjuriesClosed head injurybusinessCLOSED-HEAD INJURYinert gasesCritical Care Medicine
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The course of intracranial pressure and volume-pressure relationships following extirpation of meningiomas and astrocytomas

1978

Thirty-five patients with meningiomas were compared with 37 patients with astrocytomas with respect to the postoperative course of their ICP and elastance. In the case of the meningioma patients, the ICP increased on average over a longer period and achieved higher values than in the astrocytoma patients. In the first group, the elastance attained values that were three times as high as in the second group. There was no fixed relationship between pressure and elastance in the two groups of patients.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyIntracranial PressureBrain Neoplasmsbusiness.industryAstrocytomaAstrocytomamedicine.diseaseElastancenervous system diseasesSurgeryMeningiomamedicineHumansFemaleSurgeryPostoperative PeriodNeurology (clinical)RadiologyNeurosurgeryMeningiomabusinessneoplasmsNeuroradiologyIntracranial pressureActa Neurochirurgica
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Effects of hypertonic/hyperoncotic treatment and surgical evacuation after acute subdural hematoma in rats*

2007

Objective: The treatment of acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) consists mainly of surgical evacuation of the hematoma. It is conceivable that early preoperative neuroprotection with hypertonic/hyperoncotic treatment (HHT) can improve survival rates. The present study investigated the benefit of treatment with hypertonic/hyperoncotic solution on functional and histologic outcome as supportive therapy accompanying surgical intervention. Design: Laboratory experiment. Setting: University laboratory. Subjects: Male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing 296–350 g (n = 56). Interventions: ASDH was induced through subdural infusion of 400 μL of autologous venous blood. Thirty minutes after subdural blood infus…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyIntracranial PressurePlasma SubstitutesHydroxyethyl starchHematocritCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicinePreoperative careHydroxyethyl Starch DerivativesRats Sprague-DawleyHematomaIntensive carePreoperative CaremedicineAnimalsHematoma Subdural AcuteCerebral perfusion pressureIntracranial pressureSaline Solution Hypertonicmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryRecovery of FunctionVenous bloodmedicine.diseaseRatsSurgeryTreatment OutcomeCerebrovascular CirculationAnesthesiabusinessmedicine.drugCritical Care Medicine
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Hypertonic saline solution and decompressive craniectomy for treatment of intracranial hypertension in pediatric severe traumatic brain injury.

2002

Experimental data 8 –11 and first clinical results in adults 12,13 suggest that hypertonic saline ( 1.0) may be highly effective in lowering ICP even when mannitol has lost its therapeutic potential after prolonged and repeated use. In children, only limited experience exists with the use of hypertonic saline solutions: a randomized prospective study in children with severe head injury compared the effects on ICP (increased to 15–20 mm Hg) of isotonic (0.9% NaCl) and hypertonic (3% NaCl) saline injections, demonstrating a beneficial effect of the hypertonic solution. 14 Another prospective randomized trial compared the effects of continuous infusion of either lactated Ringer’s solution (277…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyIntracranial PressureTraumatic brain injurymedicine.medical_treatmentBrain damageCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicineDrug Administration ScheduleInjury Severity ScorePreoperative CaremedicineHumansChildInfusions IntravenousSalineOsmolePostoperative CareSaline Solution Hypertonicbusiness.industryHead injurySodiumGlasgow Coma ScaleAccidents Trafficmedicine.diseaseDecompression SurgicalHypertonic salineSurgeryAnesthesiaBrain InjuriesSurgeryDecompressive craniectomyAccidental Fallsmedicine.symptomIntracranial HypertensionbusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedCraniotomyThe Journal of trauma
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Initiation of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation and its effects upon cerebral circulation in pigs: an experimental study

2006

BACKGROUND: Current practice at high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) initiation is a stepwise increase of the constant applied airway pressure to achieve lung recruitment. We hypothesized that HFOV would lead to more adverse cerebral haemodynamics than does pressure controlled ventilation (PCV) in the presence of experimental intracranial hypertension (IH) and acute lung injury (ALI) in pigs with similar mean airway pressure settings. METHODS: In 12 anesthetized pigs (24-27 kg) with IH and ALI, mean airway pressure (P(mean)) was increased (to 20, 25, 30 cm H(2)O every 30 min), either with HFOV or with PCV. The order of the two ventilatory modes (cross-over) was randomized. Mean art…

Mean arterial pressureIntracranial PressureSwinePartial PressureHigh-Frequency VentilationLung injuryMean airway pressureCerebral circulationAnimalsMedicineNormocapniaCerebral perfusion pressureIntracranial pressureAir PressureRespiratory Distress SyndromePulmonary Gas Exchangebusiness.industryHemodynamicsBrainCarbon DioxideRespiration ArtificialOxygenDisease Models AnimalAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineCerebral blood flowCerebrovascular CirculationAnesthesiaIntracranial HypertensionbusinessBritish Journal of Anaesthesia
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2006

The objective was to study the effects of a lung recruitment procedure by stepwise increases of mean airway pressure upon organ blood flow and hemodynamics during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) versus pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV) in experimental lung injury. Lung damage was induced by repeated lung lavages in seven anesthetized pigs (23–26 kg). In randomized order, HFOV and PCV were performed with a fixed sequence of mean airway pressure increases (20, 25, and 30 mbar every 30 minutes). The transpulmonary pressure, systemic hemodynamics, intracranial pressure, cerebral perfusion pressure, organ blood flow (fluorescent microspheres), arterial and mixed venous blood ga…

Mean arterial pressurebusiness.industryAnesthesiaHemodynamicsMedicineLung injuryMean airway pressureCerebral perfusion pressureCritical Care and Intensive Care MedicinePulmonary wedge pressurebusinessIntracranial pressureTranspulmonary pressureCritical Care
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Spontaneous Cortical Spreading Depression and Intracranial Pressure Following Acute Subdural Hematoma in a Rat

2012

Acute subdural hemorrhage (ASDH) is a frequent and devastating consequence of traumatic brain injury. Tissue damage develops rapidly and makes treatment even more difficult. Management of increased intracranial pressure (ICP) due to extravasated blood volume and brain swelling is often insufficient to control all adverse effects of ASDH. In addition to sheer volume, spontaneously triggered cortical spreading depression (CSD) that leads to cell death following ischemia or trauma may contribute to injury development after ASDH. Therefore, we explored the occurrence of CSD by tissue impedance (IMP) measurement in a rat model subjected to ASDH. IMP and intraventricular and mean arterial pressur…

Mean arterial pressurebusiness.industryTraumatic brain injuryCortical spreading depressionAnesthesiaIschemiaMedicineSubdural hemorrhageBlood volumebusinessmedicine.diseaseAcute subdural hematomaIntracranial pressure
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