| Literature DB >> 35386410 |
Logan Froese1, Alwyn Gomez2,3, Amanjyot Singh Sainbhi1, Trevor Slack1, Frederick A Zeiler1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
Literature pertaining to traumatic brain injury care involves the mediation and control of secondary brain injury mechanisms, chief among these is cerebral autoregulation. Cerebral autoregulation is frequently assessed through surrogate measures of cerebrovascular reactivity. An important aspect to acknowledge when calculating cerebrovascular reactivity indices is the linearity within two-parent bio-signals or variables. We highlighted the concept of linearity in raw parent bio-signals used for the calculation of the cerebrovascular reactivity index and what potential implications linearity carries for index derivation. Key of which is that the initial differencing or location of the pressure probes does not influence linear methods of cerebral reactivity calculations so long as the slow-wave vasogenic changes are being recorded.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral autoregulation; cerebrovascular reactivity (CVRx); continuous monitoring; linearity; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2022 PMID: 35386410 PMCID: PMC8978556 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.857617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Correlation as a change in multiplicative scaling. The figure demonstrates the correlation between variables 1 and 2 over a 5-s time window. Note that despite the change in scaling, the correlation is always 0 (linearity is preserved).
Figure 2Correlation to additive changes. The figure demonstrates the correlation between variables 1 and 2 over a 5-s time window. Note that despite the change in mean value, the correlation is still 0 (linearity is preserved).