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      Intracranial Pressure and Neuromonitoring in Brain Injury 

      Morphological and Hemodynamic Evaluations by Means of Transcranial Power Doppler Imaging in Patients with Severe Head Injury

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          Power Doppler US: a potentially useful alternative to mean frequency-based color Doppler US.

          The authors present a preliminary report to demonstrate a new color Doppler (CD) ultrasonography (US) technique called power Doppler (PD), which displays the total integrated Doppler power in color, and to compare PD with CD imaging, which generally displays an estimate of the mean Doppler frequency shift. Two standard commercial US scanners that encode the integrated power in the Doppler signal in color were used to demonstrate PD. A standard nonflow-containing US phantom, a normal right kidney, and a torsive and normal contralateral testis were scanned in the power mode. In the phantom and kidney, results with CD and PD were directly compared. PD does not alias, is relatively angle independent, and displays background noise in a way that increases the usable dynamic range of a US scanner. This extended dynamic range should increase machine sensitivity and may demonstrate increased flow in certain circumstances. PD is a new CD imaging imaging mode that might be superior to CD in some cases.
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            Cerebral vasospasm diagnosis by means of angiography and blood velocity measurements

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              Posttraumatic cerebral arterial spasm: transcranial Doppler ultrasound, cerebral blood flow, and angiographic findings.

              Thirty patients admitted after suffering closed head injuries, with Glasgow Coma Scale scores ranging from 3 to 15, were evaluated with transcranial Doppler ultrasound monitoring. Blood flow velocity was determined in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and the intracranial portion of the internal carotid artery (ICA) in all patients. Because proximal flow in the extracranial ICA declines in velocity when arterial narrowing becomes hemodynamically significant, the extracranial ICA velocity was concurrently monitored in 19 patients. To assess cerebral perfusion, cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements obtained with the intravenous 133Xe technique were completed in 16 patients. Vasospasm, designated as MCA velocity exceeding 120 cm/sec, was found in eight patients (26.7%). Severe vasospasm, defined as MCA velocity greater than 200 cm/sec, occurred in three patients, and was confirmed by angiography in all three. Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) was documented by computerized tomography in five (62.5%) of the eight patients with vasospasm. All cases of severe vasospasm were associated with subarachnoid blood. The time course of vasospasm in patients with traumatic SAH was similar to that found in patients with aneurysmal SAH; in contrast, arterial spasm not associated with SAH demonstrated an uncharacteristically short duration (mean 1.25 days), suggesting that this may be a different type of spasm. A significant correlation (p less than 0.05) was identified between the lowest CBF and highest MCA velocity in patients during the period of vasospasm, indicating that arterial narrowing can lead to impaired CBF. Ischemic brain damage was found in one patient who had evidence of cerebral infarction in the territories supplied by the arteries affected by spasm. These findings demonstrate that delayed cerebral arterial spasm is a frequent complication of closed head injury and that the severity of spasm is, in some cases, comparable to that seen in aneurysmal SAH. This experience suggests that vasospasm is an important secondary posttraumatic insult that is potentially treatable.
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                Book Chapter
                1998
                : 94-100
                10.1007/978-3-7091-6475-4_29
                7b18660b-b0bd-4296-8d90-6345ff43ae8d
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