Literature DB >> 11411244

Pulsatile electrical impedance response from cerebrally dead adult patients is not a reliable tool for detecting cerebral perfusion changes.

L Basano1, P Ottonello, F Nobili, P Vitali, F B Pallavicini, B Ricca, T Prastaro, A Robert, G Rodriguez.   

Abstract

The original objective of this work was to verify the possibility of using electrical pulsatile cerebral impedance measurements as a diagnostic aid for assessing the brain-death condition in adults; a subordinate target was to validate a simple method for detecting perfusional changes in the brain. To this end, impedance signals were recorded, for a comparative study, from both live subjects and brain-dead patients, using a simple four-electrode arrangement. Rather unexpectedly, pulsatile transcephalic impedance waveforms exhibiting a temporal dependance similar to those of live subjects were detected in artificially ventilated, cerebrally dead, adult subjects; distributions of the time delays between impedance peaks and ECG peaks were also recorded for the two groups (dead and live subjects). These data provided no evidence, at the 1% significance level, against the hypothesis that the two sample groups are drawn from identical populations. The detection of impedance variations from brain-dead patients can be explained by the residual persistence of blood flow through the scalp, by mechanical variations synchronous with the heart beat and by the presence of the oscillating flow and the systolic spikes that precede the final blood flow arrest. The fact that impedance variations can be traced back to a multiplicity of causes, unrelated to the normal unidirectional flow, renders the transcephalic impedance method inappropriate for detecting cerebral perfusion changes in adults. This conclusion is also strengthened by some theoretical results recently derived from a multilayer model of the head.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11411244     DOI: 10.1088/0967-3334/22/2/306

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Meas        ISSN: 0967-3334            Impact factor:   2.833


  2 in total

1.  Intracranial microprobe for evaluating neuro-hemodynamic coupling in unanesthetized human neocortex.

Authors:  Corey J Keller; Sydney S Cash; Suresh Narayanan; Chunmao Wang; Ruben Kuzniecky; Chad Carlson; Orrin Devinsky; Thomas Thesen; Werner Doyle; Angelo Sassaroli; David A Boas; Istvan Ulbert; Eric Halgren
Journal:  J Neurosci Methods       Date:  2009-02-13       Impact factor: 2.390

2.  To what extent is the bipolar rheoencephalographic signal contaminated by scalp blood flow? A clinical study to quantify its extra and non-extracranial components.

Authors:  Juan J Perez
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2014-09-06       Impact factor: 2.819

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.