4.7 Article

Relationship between the shape of intracranial pressure pulse waveform and computed tomography characteristics in patients after traumatic brain injury

Journal

CRITICAL CARE
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13054-023-04731-z

Keywords

Intracranial pressure; Pulse waveform; Morphological analysis; Traumatic brain injury; Computed tomography; Neuromonitoring

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This study investigates the relationship between intracranial pressure pulse shape and CT features in traumatic brain injury patients. The results reveal that pulse shape index is associated with intracranial mass lesions (including midline shift and space-occupying lesions) and correlates significantly with the extent of the lesions and CT scores.
Background Midline shift and mass lesions may occur with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and are associated with higher mortality and morbidity. The shape of intracranial pressure (ICP) pulse waveform reflects the state of cerebrospinal pressure-volume compensation which may be disturbed by brain injury. We aimed to investigate the link between ICP pulse shape and pathological computed tomography (CT) features.Methods ICP recordings and CT scans from 130 TBI patients from the CENTER-TBI high-resolution sub-study were analyzed retrospectively. Midline shift, lesion volume, Marshall and Rotterdam scores were assessed in the first CT scan after admission and compared with indices derived from the first 24 h of ICP recording: mean ICP, pulse amplitude of ICP (AmpICP) and pulse shape index (PSI). A neural network model was applied to automatically group ICP pulses into four classes ranging from 1 (normal) to 4 (pathological), with PSI calculated as the weighted sum of class numbers. The relationship between each metric and CT measures was assessed using Mann-Whitney U test (groups with midline shift > 5 mm or lesions > 25 cm(3) present/absent) and the Spearman correlation coefficient. Performance of ICP-derived metrics in identifying patients with pathological CT findings was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC).Results PSI was significantly higher in patients with mass lesions (with lesions: 2.4 [1.9-3.1] vs. 1.8 [1.1-2.3] in those without; p << 0.001) and those with midline shift (2.5 [1.9-3.4] vs. 1.8 [1.2-2.4]; p < 0.001), whereas mean ICP and AmpICP were comparable. PSI was significantly correlated with the extent of midline shift, total lesion volume and the Marshall and Rotterdam scores. PSI showed AUCs > 0.7 in classification of patients as presenting pathological CT features compared to AUCs <= 0.6 for mean ICP and AmpICP.Conclusions ICP pulse shape reflects the reduction in cerebrospinal compensatory reserve related to space-occupying lesions despite comparable mean ICP and AmpICP levels. Future validation of PSI is necessary to explore its association with volume imbalance in the intracranial space and a potential complementary role to the existing monitoring strategies.

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