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Journal Article

Citation

Schröder ML, Muizelaar JP, Fatouros PP, Kuta AJ, Choi SC. Neurosurgery 1998; 42(6): 1276-80; discussion 1280-1.

Affiliation

Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, Davis, Sacramento 95817, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Congress of Neurological Surgeons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9632185

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Recent early cerebral blood flow (CBF) studies in cases of severe head injury have revealed ischemia in a substantial number of patients with a variety of computed tomographically demonstrated diagnoses. The underlying derangements causing this early ischemia are unknown, but cerebral blood volume (CBV) measurements might offer some insight into this pathological abnormality. METHODS: For this purpose, stable xenon-enhanced computed tomography was used for assessment of CBF, and a dynamic computed tomographic imaging technique was used for determining CBV. Based on the occurrence of regional ischemia (CBF < 20 ml/100 g/min), seven patients with varying anatomic lesions revealed by computed tomography were identified for comparison between CBF and CBV in ischemic and nonischemic areas. RESULTS: Both CBF (15+/-4.3 versus 34+/-11 g/min, P < 0.002) and CBV (2.5+/-1.0 versus 4.9+/-1.9 ml/100 g) exhibited significantly lower values in the ischemic zones than in the nonischemic zones (means+/-standard deviations). Among 26 patients with or without ischemia observed during their initial follow-up studies, which were conducted between Days 2 and 8, all patients showed CBF and CBV values within the low-normal range. CONCLUSION: These data evidently support the suggestion that compromise of the microvasculature is the cause of early ischemia, rather than vasospasm of the larger conductance vessels.


Language: en

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