ICP and CBF regulation: A new hypothesis to explain the “Windkessel” phenomenon

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Abstract

The brain tamponade represents the final condition of a progressive intracranial pressure (ICP) increase up to values close to arterial blood pressure (BP) producing a reverberating flow pattern in the cerebral arteries with no net flow. This finding implies intracranial volume changes, therefore a full application of the Monro-Kellie doctrine is impossible. To resolve this contradiction, in eight pigs a reversible condition of brain tamponade was produced by infusing saline into a cerebral ventricle. The following parameters were measured: BP in the common carotid artery, ICP by the same needle utilised for the infusion, arterial and venous blood flow velocity (BFV) at, respectively, internal carotid artery (ICA) and sagittal sinus (SS) site by ultrasound technique. When ICP approached carotid BP values, reverberating BFV waves both at ICA and SS site were simultaneously observed. The arterial and venous reverberating waves appeared to be almost exactly superimposable, with a delay of about 40 msec. This synchronism between the pulsatile arterial and venous BFV indicates that the residual pulsation, still occurring at the arterial proximal level is compensated by a passive compression-distension of the SS with no blood volume (that is net flow) crossing the intracranial vasculature. © Springer-Verlag 2002.

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Carmelo, A., Ficola, A., Fravolini, M. L., La Cava, M., Maira, G., & Mangiola, A. (2002). ICP and CBF regulation: A new hypothesis to explain the “Windkessel” phenomenon. Acta Neurochirurgica, Supplement, 81, 113–116. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7091-6738-0_29

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