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INTRACRANIAL PRUSSER 
Done by: 
Murad Aamar 
Hashemite University
Skull has three essential components: 
- Brain tissue = 78% 
- Blood = 12% 
- Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) = 10% 
Any increase in any of these tissues causes increased ICP
Normal ICP = 4 -15 mmHg 
Factors that influence ICP: 
Arterial pressure 
Venous pressure 
Intraabdominal and intrathoracic pressure 
Posture 
Temperature 
Blood gases (CO2 levels) 
*The degree to which these factors  ICP 
depends on the ability of the brain to 
accommodate to the changes
ICP and the Monro Kellie doctrine 
Alexander Monro observed in 1783 that the cranium is a ‘rigid box’ 
containing a ‘nearly incompressible brain’. Therefore any expansion in 
the contents, especially haematoma and brain swelling, may be 
initially accommodated by exclusion of fluid components, venous 
blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Further expansion is associated 
with an exponential rise in intra-cranial pressure The result is 
hypoperfusion and herniation.
Regulation and Maintenance 
Normal intracranial pressure 
The pressure exerted by the total volume from the brain tissue, blood, and 
CSF 
If the volume in any one of the components increases within the cranial vault 
and the volume from another component is displaced, the total intracranial 
volume will not change
Normal compensatory adaptations 
-Alteration of CSF absorption 
-Displacement of CSF into spinal subarachnoid 
space
Cerebral Blood Flow 
Definition 
The amount of blood in milliliters passing 
through 100 g of brain tissue in 1 minute 
About 50 ml/min per 100 g of brain tissue
Importance of ICP to BP and CPP 
Brain needs constant supply O2 and Glucose 
BP: heart delivers blood to brain at an average BP of 120/80 
(Mean BP = 100); this mean arterial pressure (MAP) must be 
higher than ICP 
CPP (Cerebral Perfusion Pressure): is the pressure needed to 
overcome ICP in order to deliver O2 & nutrients
MAP is the DRIVING FORCE 
ICP is the RESISTENCE 
Cerebral Perfusion Prusser = MAP – ICP 
= 100 mmHg – 15 mmHg 
= 85 mmHg (Normal) 
CPP < 50 mmHg→ cerebral ischemia 
CPP < 30 mmHg → brain death
Regulatory Mechanisms of Cerebral Blood Flow 
Autoregulation of cerebral blood flow 
Metabolic Regulation of cerebral blood flow
Autoregulation 
The automatic alteration in the diameter of the 
cerebral blood vessels to maintain a constant 
blood flow to the brain 
Maintains CPP regardless of changes in BP
Problem: Autoregulation is limited 
If BP and/or ICP rises: Autoregulation fails 
When autoregulation fails, blood flow to brain increases or deceases 
→ poor perfusion and cellular ischemia or death
Metabolic Regulation of cerebral blood flow 
Factors affecting cerebral blood flow 
PCO2 
PO2 
Acidosis
Mechanisms of Increased ICP 
Causes 
Mass lesion 
Cerebral edema 
Head injury 
Brain inflammation 
Metabolic insult 
Sustained increases in ICP result in brainstem 
compression and herniation of the brain from one 
compartment to another
CSF pathway:
GENERAL PRENCEPLES 
A few basic principles concerning intracranial dynamics, CSF, CBF, 
and ICP are essential to grasp at the outset and are sum- marized 
here.
1-The first principle is obvious. The cranial cavity has a fixed 
volume comprised of 
(1) brain tissue (parenchyma), 
(2) CSF, and 
(3) blood vessels and intravascular blood. 
According to the Monro-Kellie doctrine, the sum of these 
components within the fixed volume of the cranial cavity 
implies that an increase in one component must be 
accompanied by an equal and opposite decrease in one or both 
of the remaining components.
If this does not occur, the ICP will rise to levels close to the systemic 
blood pressure, producing a reverberating blood flow pattern with no 
net flow. 
For each intracranial component, there is a family of pathologic 
conditions of excess volume and a means to improve that excess 
See the next slide:
-Brain tissue: brain edema due to inflammation , tumer, cyst, 
abscess or hematoma. 
-Vascular: elevated Pco2; hyperperfusion rate with loss of 
autoregulation as in sever hepertention after a truma; venous 
return obstructon 
-CSF: impaired absorption with congenital, posthemorrhagic or 
postinfectious hydrocephalus.
A consequence of this principle is that if there is an elevation in the 
volume of any one compartment, there is a stage of compensation in 
which the volume of one or more other compartments can be 
reduced to avoid elevations in the ICP.
2-The second principle is not obvious, and may seem coun- terintuitive. 
-Spinal fluid is produced at a constant rate (≈15 to20 mL/hr), 
by an energy-dependent, physicochemical process, mainly by the choroid 
plexus of the ventricles. 
It is essential to understand that production is little affected by any 
intracranial backpressure; thus, CSF production continues unabated, even to 
lethal elevations of intracranial pressure.
Because production is almost always constant, it follows that 
derangement of CSF dynamics almost always involves some aspect of 
impeding CSF absorption through obstruction along the CSF pathways 
inside the brain, subarachnoid spaces at the basal cisterns or 
cerebralconvexity, or arachnoid granulations from which most absorp-tion 
occurs. 
The only exceptions to the almost constant CSF production are the 
excess production associated with the rare choroid plexus papilloma 
tumor and the occasional decreased CSF production seen with some 
gram-negative bacte- rial meningitis with ventriculitis, usually in 
neonates.
3-The third basic principle is that the CBF normally varies over a wide 
range (30 to 100 mL/100 g brain tissue/min), depending on metabolic 
demand from neuronal activity within a particular area of the brain. 
The CBF may be considered in aggregate or of specific small regions, 
pathologic or normal. 
The blood flow to any brain area is generally abundant, exceeding 
demand by a wide margin, so that O2 extraction ratios are often low. 
The brain vasculature matches the blood flow to tissue metabolic 
demand and the CBF generally maintains what is needed, despite wide 
variations in systemic blood pressure, by a phenomenon known as 
autoregulation. .
Factors such as an elevated or decreased arterial PCO2 shift the 
curve as indicated. In the setting of traumatic brain injury, the 
curve becomes more pronounced (i.e., smaller changes in blood 
pressure or PCO2) and affects the CBF dramatically.
* If tissue demand exceeds autoregulation, or if CBF declines for 
pathologic reasons, the first defense is that the O2 extraction will 
increase (i.e., arteriovenous O2 difference, AVDO2) An important 
implication is that if brain dysfunction is occurring clinically 
because compensatory mechanisms (e.g., autoregulation changing 
the vascular resistance, capacity to elevate mean systemic arterial 
pressure, ability to increase O2 extraction) have been exceeded, the 
tolerance for further decline in blood flow is low, and tissue damage 
is seriously threatened. Therapy to increase blood pressure or 
decrease ICP may be urgently needed.
A fourth principle derives from the other three and the fact that 
injured tissue swells, making obvious the potential for a cascading 
injury by a vicious cycle mechanism (next figure). 
If the stage of compensation (see earlier), even with therapy, is 
exceeded, and ICP is elevated high enough by some mechanism so that 
cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) declines, CBF can decline to levels 
at which tissue injury occurs. 
CPP = mean arterial pressure (MAP) − ICP
Brain edema swelling within the closed cranium will lead to further 
increases in ICP with even further decreases in CPP in a stage of 
decompensation. When the capacity for autoregulation is exceeded 
or damaged so that it can no longer play a role, CBF is linked 
directly to the CPP.
A fifth principle concerns focal mass effect and its progression in 
regard to the complex anatomy of the cranial cavity. The cranial 
cavity is not just a hollow spherical space but contains several 
almost knifelike projections of folded dura, the falx and tentorium, 
which divide the cavity into right and left supratentorial 
compartment and an infratentorial compartment, the posterior 
fossa. The sphenoid wing is a prominent, mostly bony ridge that 
separates the anterior fossa containing the frontal lobe from the 
middle fossa containing the temporal lobe.
it is unusual for focal mass effects not to be accompanied by an 
overall increase in ICP. The point at which focal mass effect evolves 
to include a rise in overall ICP depends largely on the compliance 
within the cranial cavity. Young patients with so-called tight brains 
can develop raised ICP, even with relatively small volumes of mass 
that produce only effacement of the cortical gyri. On the other 
hand, patients with advanced cerebral atrophy can, for example, 
tolerate large frontal intracerebral hematomas or chronic subdural 
hematomas with compression of the lateral ventricle and midline 
shift while maintaining a tolerable ICP and a surprising degree of 
intact neurologic function.
A sixth principle concerns the separateness of the phenomenology of 
the following: (1) focal mass effect (as described earlier); (2) diffuse 
raised ICP; and (3) ventriculomegaly (enlargement of the cerebral 
ventricles). 
Although these three processes often occur in combination, the 
notion that they are separable comes from the observation that there 
is a pure form of each
. The pure form of raised ICP—without focal mass lesion, trauma or 
enlargement of the ventricular system—is a condition known as 
idiopathic intracranial hypertension or pseudotumor cerebri. 
The pure form of ventriculomegaly is a condition known as 
adult chronic idiopathic or normal-pressure hydro- cephalus 
(NPH).
The pure form of the focal mass lesion without increased ICP or 
ventriculomegaly is common; it occurs with tumors too small to 
raise ICP on their own that are not in a location to interfere with 
CSF pathways. Instead, there focal mass lesions are typically 
discovered incidentally or because of symptoms from a focal 
neurologic deficit or seizure disorder.
CLINICAL POINT OF VIEW 
Normal ICP varies over a wide range, with generally accepted 
values between 0 and 20 mm Hg. Diffuse raised ICP, in the fully 
evolved pure form, results in a clinical picture that may include 
symptoms of headache, nausea and vomiting, double vision, and 
obscuration of vision
The accompanying clinical signs may include papilledema and sixth 
cranial nerve palsy with lateral rectus weakness and side by side 
diplopia, 
initially worse on far vision or gaze directed toward the side of the 
palsy. The papilledema is a mostly chronic phenomenon and is not 
seen acutely.
Papilledema (or papilloedema) is optic disc swelling that is caused by 
increased intracranial pressure. The swelling is usually bilateral and can 
occur over a period of hours to weeks. Unilateral presentation is 
extremely rare
sixth cranial nerve palsy with lateral rectus weakness
. With raised ICP, there may also be obscurations of vision, in which 
patients report that their vision temporarily fades or becomes gray, 
visual loss, sometimes even to permanent blindness in combination 
with headache. these obscurations are caused by the effect of 
diffusely increased ICP on the sensitive optic nerves.
Pure ventriculomegaly—specifically, enlargement of the lateral 
ventricles—is characterized by gait disturbance and incontinence 
early in the clinical picture. As the process worsens, cognitive 
disturbances may be added on. The early appearance of gait 
disturbance and urinary incontinence is attributed to dysfunction 
of the medial cerebral hemispheres in which the leg area of the 
primary motor cortex and bladder control area reside
Parinaud’s syndrome results from dorsal midbrain com- pression, and its 
features include a loss of upgaze known as 
‘sun-setting’ . In infants, the fontanelle is tense and bulging, with an increase 
in head circumference and bulging scalp veins.
The next table summarizes the relationships among ICP, mass 
lesions, and ventriculomegaly.

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Intra-cranial pressur (ICP)

  • 1. INTRACRANIAL PRUSSER Done by: Murad Aamar Hashemite University
  • 2. Skull has three essential components: - Brain tissue = 78% - Blood = 12% - Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) = 10% Any increase in any of these tissues causes increased ICP
  • 3. Normal ICP = 4 -15 mmHg Factors that influence ICP: Arterial pressure Venous pressure Intraabdominal and intrathoracic pressure Posture Temperature Blood gases (CO2 levels) *The degree to which these factors  ICP depends on the ability of the brain to accommodate to the changes
  • 4. ICP and the Monro Kellie doctrine Alexander Monro observed in 1783 that the cranium is a ‘rigid box’ containing a ‘nearly incompressible brain’. Therefore any expansion in the contents, especially haematoma and brain swelling, may be initially accommodated by exclusion of fluid components, venous blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Further expansion is associated with an exponential rise in intra-cranial pressure The result is hypoperfusion and herniation.
  • 5. Regulation and Maintenance Normal intracranial pressure The pressure exerted by the total volume from the brain tissue, blood, and CSF If the volume in any one of the components increases within the cranial vault and the volume from another component is displaced, the total intracranial volume will not change
  • 6.
  • 7. Normal compensatory adaptations -Alteration of CSF absorption -Displacement of CSF into spinal subarachnoid space
  • 8. Cerebral Blood Flow Definition The amount of blood in milliliters passing through 100 g of brain tissue in 1 minute About 50 ml/min per 100 g of brain tissue
  • 9. Importance of ICP to BP and CPP Brain needs constant supply O2 and Glucose BP: heart delivers blood to brain at an average BP of 120/80 (Mean BP = 100); this mean arterial pressure (MAP) must be higher than ICP CPP (Cerebral Perfusion Pressure): is the pressure needed to overcome ICP in order to deliver O2 & nutrients
  • 10. MAP is the DRIVING FORCE ICP is the RESISTENCE Cerebral Perfusion Prusser = MAP – ICP = 100 mmHg – 15 mmHg = 85 mmHg (Normal) CPP < 50 mmHg→ cerebral ischemia CPP < 30 mmHg → brain death
  • 11. Regulatory Mechanisms of Cerebral Blood Flow Autoregulation of cerebral blood flow Metabolic Regulation of cerebral blood flow
  • 12. Autoregulation The automatic alteration in the diameter of the cerebral blood vessels to maintain a constant blood flow to the brain Maintains CPP regardless of changes in BP
  • 13. Problem: Autoregulation is limited If BP and/or ICP rises: Autoregulation fails When autoregulation fails, blood flow to brain increases or deceases → poor perfusion and cellular ischemia or death
  • 14. Metabolic Regulation of cerebral blood flow Factors affecting cerebral blood flow PCO2 PO2 Acidosis
  • 15. Mechanisms of Increased ICP Causes Mass lesion Cerebral edema Head injury Brain inflammation Metabolic insult Sustained increases in ICP result in brainstem compression and herniation of the brain from one compartment to another
  • 17.
  • 18. GENERAL PRENCEPLES A few basic principles concerning intracranial dynamics, CSF, CBF, and ICP are essential to grasp at the outset and are sum- marized here.
  • 19. 1-The first principle is obvious. The cranial cavity has a fixed volume comprised of (1) brain tissue (parenchyma), (2) CSF, and (3) blood vessels and intravascular blood. According to the Monro-Kellie doctrine, the sum of these components within the fixed volume of the cranial cavity implies that an increase in one component must be accompanied by an equal and opposite decrease in one or both of the remaining components.
  • 20.
  • 21. If this does not occur, the ICP will rise to levels close to the systemic blood pressure, producing a reverberating blood flow pattern with no net flow. For each intracranial component, there is a family of pathologic conditions of excess volume and a means to improve that excess See the next slide:
  • 22. -Brain tissue: brain edema due to inflammation , tumer, cyst, abscess or hematoma. -Vascular: elevated Pco2; hyperperfusion rate with loss of autoregulation as in sever hepertention after a truma; venous return obstructon -CSF: impaired absorption with congenital, posthemorrhagic or postinfectious hydrocephalus.
  • 23. A consequence of this principle is that if there is an elevation in the volume of any one compartment, there is a stage of compensation in which the volume of one or more other compartments can be reduced to avoid elevations in the ICP.
  • 24. 2-The second principle is not obvious, and may seem coun- terintuitive. -Spinal fluid is produced at a constant rate (≈15 to20 mL/hr), by an energy-dependent, physicochemical process, mainly by the choroid plexus of the ventricles. It is essential to understand that production is little affected by any intracranial backpressure; thus, CSF production continues unabated, even to lethal elevations of intracranial pressure.
  • 25. Because production is almost always constant, it follows that derangement of CSF dynamics almost always involves some aspect of impeding CSF absorption through obstruction along the CSF pathways inside the brain, subarachnoid spaces at the basal cisterns or cerebralconvexity, or arachnoid granulations from which most absorp-tion occurs. The only exceptions to the almost constant CSF production are the excess production associated with the rare choroid plexus papilloma tumor and the occasional decreased CSF production seen with some gram-negative bacte- rial meningitis with ventriculitis, usually in neonates.
  • 26. 3-The third basic principle is that the CBF normally varies over a wide range (30 to 100 mL/100 g brain tissue/min), depending on metabolic demand from neuronal activity within a particular area of the brain. The CBF may be considered in aggregate or of specific small regions, pathologic or normal. The blood flow to any brain area is generally abundant, exceeding demand by a wide margin, so that O2 extraction ratios are often low. The brain vasculature matches the blood flow to tissue metabolic demand and the CBF generally maintains what is needed, despite wide variations in systemic blood pressure, by a phenomenon known as autoregulation. .
  • 27.
  • 28. Factors such as an elevated or decreased arterial PCO2 shift the curve as indicated. In the setting of traumatic brain injury, the curve becomes more pronounced (i.e., smaller changes in blood pressure or PCO2) and affects the CBF dramatically.
  • 29. * If tissue demand exceeds autoregulation, or if CBF declines for pathologic reasons, the first defense is that the O2 extraction will increase (i.e., arteriovenous O2 difference, AVDO2) An important implication is that if brain dysfunction is occurring clinically because compensatory mechanisms (e.g., autoregulation changing the vascular resistance, capacity to elevate mean systemic arterial pressure, ability to increase O2 extraction) have been exceeded, the tolerance for further decline in blood flow is low, and tissue damage is seriously threatened. Therapy to increase blood pressure or decrease ICP may be urgently needed.
  • 30.
  • 31. A fourth principle derives from the other three and the fact that injured tissue swells, making obvious the potential for a cascading injury by a vicious cycle mechanism (next figure). If the stage of compensation (see earlier), even with therapy, is exceeded, and ICP is elevated high enough by some mechanism so that cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) declines, CBF can decline to levels at which tissue injury occurs. CPP = mean arterial pressure (MAP) − ICP
  • 32.
  • 33. Brain edema swelling within the closed cranium will lead to further increases in ICP with even further decreases in CPP in a stage of decompensation. When the capacity for autoregulation is exceeded or damaged so that it can no longer play a role, CBF is linked directly to the CPP.
  • 34. A fifth principle concerns focal mass effect and its progression in regard to the complex anatomy of the cranial cavity. The cranial cavity is not just a hollow spherical space but contains several almost knifelike projections of folded dura, the falx and tentorium, which divide the cavity into right and left supratentorial compartment and an infratentorial compartment, the posterior fossa. The sphenoid wing is a prominent, mostly bony ridge that separates the anterior fossa containing the frontal lobe from the middle fossa containing the temporal lobe.
  • 35. it is unusual for focal mass effects not to be accompanied by an overall increase in ICP. The point at which focal mass effect evolves to include a rise in overall ICP depends largely on the compliance within the cranial cavity. Young patients with so-called tight brains can develop raised ICP, even with relatively small volumes of mass that produce only effacement of the cortical gyri. On the other hand, patients with advanced cerebral atrophy can, for example, tolerate large frontal intracerebral hematomas or chronic subdural hematomas with compression of the lateral ventricle and midline shift while maintaining a tolerable ICP and a surprising degree of intact neurologic function.
  • 36. A sixth principle concerns the separateness of the phenomenology of the following: (1) focal mass effect (as described earlier); (2) diffuse raised ICP; and (3) ventriculomegaly (enlargement of the cerebral ventricles). Although these three processes often occur in combination, the notion that they are separable comes from the observation that there is a pure form of each
  • 37. . The pure form of raised ICP—without focal mass lesion, trauma or enlargement of the ventricular system—is a condition known as idiopathic intracranial hypertension or pseudotumor cerebri. The pure form of ventriculomegaly is a condition known as adult chronic idiopathic or normal-pressure hydro- cephalus (NPH).
  • 38. The pure form of the focal mass lesion without increased ICP or ventriculomegaly is common; it occurs with tumors too small to raise ICP on their own that are not in a location to interfere with CSF pathways. Instead, there focal mass lesions are typically discovered incidentally or because of symptoms from a focal neurologic deficit or seizure disorder.
  • 39. CLINICAL POINT OF VIEW Normal ICP varies over a wide range, with generally accepted values between 0 and 20 mm Hg. Diffuse raised ICP, in the fully evolved pure form, results in a clinical picture that may include symptoms of headache, nausea and vomiting, double vision, and obscuration of vision
  • 40. The accompanying clinical signs may include papilledema and sixth cranial nerve palsy with lateral rectus weakness and side by side diplopia, initially worse on far vision or gaze directed toward the side of the palsy. The papilledema is a mostly chronic phenomenon and is not seen acutely.
  • 41. Papilledema (or papilloedema) is optic disc swelling that is caused by increased intracranial pressure. The swelling is usually bilateral and can occur over a period of hours to weeks. Unilateral presentation is extremely rare
  • 42. sixth cranial nerve palsy with lateral rectus weakness
  • 43. . With raised ICP, there may also be obscurations of vision, in which patients report that their vision temporarily fades or becomes gray, visual loss, sometimes even to permanent blindness in combination with headache. these obscurations are caused by the effect of diffusely increased ICP on the sensitive optic nerves.
  • 44. Pure ventriculomegaly—specifically, enlargement of the lateral ventricles—is characterized by gait disturbance and incontinence early in the clinical picture. As the process worsens, cognitive disturbances may be added on. The early appearance of gait disturbance and urinary incontinence is attributed to dysfunction of the medial cerebral hemispheres in which the leg area of the primary motor cortex and bladder control area reside
  • 45. Parinaud’s syndrome results from dorsal midbrain com- pression, and its features include a loss of upgaze known as ‘sun-setting’ . In infants, the fontanelle is tense and bulging, with an increase in head circumference and bulging scalp veins.
  • 46. The next table summarizes the relationships among ICP, mass lesions, and ventriculomegaly.