Intracranial pressure (ICP): Difference between revisions

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* Once craniospinal buffering capacity exhausted (decompensation point), small ↑ in intracranial vol. → substantial ↑ ICP
* Once craniospinal buffering capacity exhausted (decompensation point), small ↑ in intracranial vol. → substantial ↑ ICP


== Davson equation ==
= Davson equation =<blockquote>'''ICP = If * Rout - PSS'''</blockquote>
<blockquote>'''ICP = If * Rout - PSS'''</blockquote>
*resistance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow (Rout)
*resistance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow (Rout)
*formation of cerebrospinal fluid (If)
*formation of cerebrospinal fluid (If)
*sagittal sinus pressure (PSS)
*sagittal sinus pressure (PSS)
[[Category:Neurophysiology]]
[[Category:Neurophysiology]]

Revision as of 18:04, 12 September 2023

  • Normal ICP: <10-15 mmHg, varies w/ age, position, straining, & coughing

ICP & intracranial volume

  • Brain parenchyma: 1400 ml (80% total, 10% solid, 70% tissue water)
  • CBV: 150 ml (10% total)
  • CSF: 150 ml (10% total) (tot. ~1700 ml)

Monro-Kellie doctrine

  • ↑ in vol. of one intracranial compartment → ↑ ICP unless offset by ↓ vol. in another compartment
  • Brain parenchyma predominantly incompressible fluid, CBV & CSF key in buffering additional intracranial volume by ↑ venous outflow/↓ CBF, displacing/↓ intracranial CSF
  • Infants have extra volume compensation w/ open fontanelle
  • Pathologic processes can easily ↑ ICP by exceeding compensatory capacity due to small size of CBV & CSF compartments

Pressure-Volume curve

* Additional intracranial volume initially accommodated w/ little/no Δ ICP (flat part of curve)

  • Once craniospinal buffering capacity exhausted (decompensation point), small ↑ in intracranial vol. → substantial ↑ ICP

= Davson equation =

ICP = If * Rout - PSS

  • resistance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow (Rout)
  • formation of cerebrospinal fluid (If)
  • sagittal sinus pressure (PSS)