4.6 Article

Critical Cerebral Perfusion Pressure at High Intracranial Pressure Measured by Induced Cerebrovascular and Intracranial Pressure Reactivity

Journal

CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Volume 42, Issue 12, Pages 2582-2590

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000655

Keywords

blood-brain barrier permeability; cerebral blood flow autoregulation; cerebral perfusion pressure; cortical microvascular shunts; hypoxia; induced cerebrovascular reactivity; induced intracranial pressure reactivity; intracranial pressure

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [12BGIA11730011]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NS061216, CoBRE 8P30GM103400]
  3. University of New Mexico School of Medicine
  4. China Scholarship Council [20120637504]
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  6. American Heart Association
  7. China Scholarship Council

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Objectives: The lower limit of cerebral blood flow autoregulation is the critical cerebral perfusion pressure at which cerebral blood flow begins to fall. It is important that cerebral perfusion pressure be maintained above this level to ensure adequate cerebral blood flow, especially in patients with high intracranial pressure. However, the critical cerebral perfusion pressure of 50 mm Hg, obtained by decreasing mean arterial pressure, differs from the value of 30 mm Hg, obtained by increasing intracranial pressure, which we previously showed was due to microvascular shunt flow maintenance of a falsely high cerebral blood flow. The present study shows that the critical cerebral perfusion pressure, measured by increasing intracranial pressure to decrease cerebral perfusion pressure, is inaccurate but accurately determined by dopamine-induced dynamic intracranial pressure reactivity and cerebrovascular reactivity. Design: Cerebral perfusion pressure was decreased either by increasing intracranial pressure or decreasing mean arterial pressure and the critical cerebral perfusion pressure by both methods compared. Cortical Doppler flux, intracranial pressure, and mean arterial pressure were monitored throughout the study. At each cerebral perfusion pressure, we measured microvascular RBC flow velocity, blood-brain barrier integrity (transcapillary dye extravasation), and tissue oxygenation (reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) in the cerebral cortex of rats using in vivo two-photon laser scanning microscopy. Setting: University laboratory. Subjects: Male Sprague-Dawley rats. Interventions: At each cerebral perfusion pressure, dopamine-induced arterial pressure transients (similar to 10mm Hg, similar to 45 s duration) were used to measure induced intracranial pressure reactivity (Delta intra-cranial pressure/Delta mean arterial pressure) and induced cerebrovascular reactivity (Delta cerebral blood flow/Delta mean arterial pressure). Measurements and Main Results: At a normal cerebral perfusion pressure of 70 mm Hg, 10 mm Hg mean arterial pressure pulses had no effect on intracranial pressure or cerebral blood flow (induced intracranial pressure reactivity = -0.03 +/- 0.07 and induced cerebrovascular reactivity = -0.02 +/- 0.09), reflecting intact autoregulation. Decreasing cerebral perfusion pressure to 50 mm Hg by increasing intracranial pressure increased induced intracranial pressure reactivity and induced cerebrovascular reactivity to 0.24 +/- 0.09 and 0.31 +/- 0.13, respectively, reflecting impaired autoregulation (p < 0.05). By static cerebral blood flow, the first significant decrease in cerebral blood flow occurred at a cerebral perfusion pressure of 30 mm Hg (0.71 +/- 0.08, p < 0.05). Conclusions: Critical cerebral perfusion pressure of 50 mm Hg was accurately determined by induced intracranial pressure reactivity and induced cerebrovascular reactivity, whereas the static method failed.

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