Literature DB >> 404400

Physiological consequences of experimental cerebral missile injury and use of data analysis to predict survival.

H A Crokard, F D Brown, A B Calica, L M Johns, S Mullan.   

Abstract

The authors describe cerebrovascular and cerebral metabolic changes in monkeys, subjected to cerebral missile injury. After injury with BB pellet at 90 m/sec, there is a rapid rise in intracranial pressure (ICP), which reaches a peak 2 to 5 minutes posttrauma, and then falls to about 20 to 30 mm Hg. This, with a fall in mean blood pressure (MBP), results in a 50% reduction in cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is also reduced, although acutely there is no close relationship with (CPP). Cerebrovascular resistance falls initially and then at 30 minutes rises to very high values. Cerebral metabolic rates (CMR's) for oxygen fall after injury and remain low for the rest of the animal's life; CMR's for lactate rise immediately after injury and persists for 5 hours, then fall. After injury with a faster missile (180 m/sec), the ICP rises higher and faster, and the peak is shorter. The CCP is reduced in this injury to approximately 30 mm Hg, and only one animal survived more than 1 hour. With the conventional forms of data analysis, the length of survival after injury correlates well with MBP, ICP, and CBF, but separately they were completely unsatisfactory for prediction of an individuals prognosis. With the technique of multiple linear regression analysis, the survival of individual animals could be predicted with great accuracy. This is possible also when two postinjury parameters,CBF and MBP, are used.

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Year:  1977        PMID: 404400     DOI: 10.3171/jns.1977.46.6.0784

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0022-3085            Impact factor:   5.115


  4 in total

1.  Cerebral lactate production in relation to intracranial pressure, cranial computed tomography findings, and outcome in patients with severe head injury.

Authors:  R Murr; W Stummer; L Schürer; J Polasek
Journal:  Acta Neurochir (Wien)       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 2.216

2.  [Cerebral missile injuries in civilian practice (author's transl)].

Authors:  H Kretschmer
Journal:  Langenbecks Arch Chir       Date:  1980

Review 3.  Penetrating gunshots to the head and lack of immediate incapacitation. I. Wound ballistics and mechanisms of incapacitation.

Authors:  B Karger
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 2.686

4.  CT analysis of missile head injury.

Authors:  N Besenski; D Jadro-Santel; F Jelavić-Koić; D Pavić; D Mikulić; K Glavina; J Masković
Journal:  Neuroradiology       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 2.804

  4 in total

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