Literature DB >> 7760199

Focal ischemia due to traumatic contusions documented by stable xenon-CT and ultrastructural studies.

M L Schröder1, J P Muizelaar, M R Bullock, J B Salvant, J T Povlishock.   

Abstract

A traumatic cerebral contusion causes a zone of perifocal neuronal necrosis, the cause of which is not known; the surgical management of these lesions remains controversial. To determine the pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for brain damage after contusions, the authors performed cerebral blood flow (CBF) mapping studies and related these to change in local cerebral blood volume (CBV) and ultrastructure. In 11 severely head injured patients with contusion, CBF and CBV were measured in pericontusional areas using stable xenon-computerized tomography (CT). These studies demonstrated a profound reduction in perilesional CBF (mean 17.5 +/- 4 ml/100 g/min), which was always accompanied by a zone of edema defined by CT density measurements. Mean CBV in these regions was 2.3 +/- 0.4 ml/100 g, a reduction to approximately one-half the value of 4.8 ml/100 g found in the nonedematous regions, and to approximately 35% of the value of 6.0 ml/100 g found in normal volunteers. Ultrastructural analysis of the pericontusional tissue, taken at surgery in four patients with high intracranial pressure showed glial swelling with narrowing of the microvascular lumina due to massive podocytic process swelling. Additionally, some suggestion of vascular occlusion due to erythrocyte and leukocyte stasis was seen. These data support the conclusion that microvascular compromise by compression and/or occlusion is a major event associated with profound perilesional hypoperfusion, which is a uniform finding within edematous pericontusional tissue.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7760199     DOI: 10.3171/jns.1995.82.6.0966

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


  22 in total

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3.  Increases in Microvascular Perfusion and Tissue Oxygenation via Vasodilatation After Anodal Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in the Healthy and Traumatized Mouse Brain.

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4.  Global cerebral blood flow and CPP after severe head injury: a xenon-CT study.

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6.  Progressive hemorrhagic injury after severe traumatic brain injury: effect of hemoglobin transfusion thresholds.

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7.  The Formation of Microthrombi in Parenchymal Microvessels after Traumatic Brain Injury Is Independent of Coagulation Factor XI.

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8.  Redefining the pericontusional penumbra following traumatic brain injury: evidence of deteriorating metabolic derangements based on positron emission tomography.

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9.  Perfusion-CT for early assessment of traumatic cerebral contusions.

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10.  Assessment of thalamic perfusion in patients with mild traumatic brain injury by true FISP arterial spin labelling MR imaging at 3T.

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