Daniel Agustin Godoy, Sergio Brasil, Andres M. Rubiano
{"title":"Further support for the intracranial compartmental syndrome concept","authors":"Daniel Agustin Godoy, Sergio Brasil, Andres M. Rubiano","doi":"10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The current approach to severe neuro-injury monitoring, especially traumatic brain injury (TBI), has experienced paradigm shifts that open a broad outlook for the future [1]. On one hand, advances in pathophysiological knowledge have made possible establishing today that intracranial pressure (ICP) control is just one more epiphenomenon within other serious events that occur simultaneously such as tissue hypoxia, metabolic crises and cerebral energy dysfunction [1]. On the other hand, the advent of new monitoring techniques (invasive and noninvasive) have allowed a deeper analysis in real time of what is happening in the injured brain [1]. One of the most important advancements in neuromonitoring was the recent popularization of the analysis of the ICP wave (ICPw) morphology. Current studies pointed the changes in ICPw as reliable markers of cerebrospinal compliance and to be followed in clinical environments. In this regard, ICPw was considered the pillar of the intracranial compartmental syndrome (ICCS) concept [2]. So, <i>“ICCS occurs when the compliance of the intracranial system is compromised as a result of the exhaustion of the compensating mechanisms that try to keep it within normal limits’’</i>. ‘<i>’Perfusion, oxygenation and energy utilization compromise are its consequences’’</i> [2]<i>.</i></p><p>Further enlightenments raised from the recent study of Kazimierska et al., which evaluated a series of 130 patients who were victims of severe TBI from the CENTER-TBI database. Those authors analyzed the relationship between parameters obtained from the neuroimaging Computed Tomography (CT) scan upon admission and variables collected from invasive ICP monitoring [3]. Injury mass volume, degree of midline shift, Marshall’s and Rotterdam classifications were the data provided by the CT scans, while mean ICP values, wave amplitude and indices derived from the analysis of ICP recordings. A neural network model (previously tested with 93% accuracy) was applied in order to automatically group ICP waveforms into 4 classes [3]. As a main finding, the pulse shape index—PSI was strongly correlated with the analyzed tomographic parameters (<i>p</i> = 0.001), while mean ICP was correlated with ICPw amplitude, indicating that the morphology of the ICP pulse wave reflects a decrease in the cerebrospinal compensatory reserve therefore of cerebral compliance [3].</p><p>ICP waveform is a result of complex interaction between volumes (blood, brain and cerebrospinal fluid) restrained by meninges and the bony skull box, interacting with dynamic phenomena as blood viscosity, cardiac and respiratory cycles per example [1]. Therefore, several are the ways of exploring and translating ICPw into parameters readable at the bedside to assess compensatory reserve status. Prior to PSI, the compensatory reserve index (RAP) was described by Czosnyka et al. as the moving correlation between ICP values and ICP pulse amplitude variation [4]. Both the PSI and RAP can be assessed imputing ICP and further variables to the ICM + software (Cambridge Enterprise Ltd., Cambridge, UK). More recently, based on ICP waveform peak relationship changes following cerebral compliance status, Brasil et al. observed the P2/P1 ratio (the second peak amplitude elevation) and time-to-peak (the time length from pulse triggering to its highest peak amplitude) variations following an induced mild ICP variation in neurocritical patients, demonstrating that these parameters may also translate the pressure/volume intracranial relationship [5]. The latter parameters acquisition and assessment are available by means of noninvasive hardware, with potential to widening intracranial compliance applications beyond severe acute brain injuries.</p><p>With the infinite contribution which newer hardware and software offer in data acquisition and analysis, we reach assessment options to support the ICCS hypothesis, raising the foundations for developing multicenter prospective clinical studies and validate the concept on a large scale.</p><p>Not applicable.</p><dl><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>TBI:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Traumatic brain injury</p>\n</dd><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>ICP:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Intracranial pressure</p>\n</dd><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>CT:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Computed tomography</p>\n</dd><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>ICCS:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Intracranial compartmental syndrome</p>\n</dd><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>PSI:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Pulse shape index</p>\n</dd><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>RAP:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Compensatory reserve index</p>\n</dd><dt style=\"min-width:50px;\"><dfn>ICM:</dfn></dt><dd>\n<p>Intensive care monitor</p>\n</dd></dl><ol data-track-component=\"outbound reference\" data-track-context=\"references section\"><li data-counter=\"1.\"><p>Lazaridis C, Foreman B. Management strategies based on multi-modality neuromonitoring in severe traumatic brain injury. Neurotherapeutics. 2023;20(6):1457–71. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13311-023-01411-2.</p><p>Article PubMed Google Scholar </p></li><li data-counter=\"2.\"><p>Godoy DA, Brasil S, Iaccarino C, et al. The intracranial compartmental syndrome: a proposed model for acute brain injury monitoring and management. Crit Care. 2023;27:137. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-023-04427-4.</p><p>Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar </p></li><li data-counter=\"3.\"><p>Kazimierska A, Uryga A, Mataczyński C, et al. Relationship between the shape of intracranial pressure pulse waveform and computed tomography characteristics in patients after traumatic brain injury. Crit Care. 2023;27:447. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-023-04731-z.</p><p>Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar </p></li><li data-counter=\"4.\"><p>Czosnyka M, Smielewski P, Timofeev I, Lavinio A, Guazzo E, Hutchinson P, et al. Intracranial pressure: more than a number. Neurosurg Focus. 2007;22(5):E10. https://doi.org/10.3171/foc.2007.22.5.11.</p><p>Article PubMed Google Scholar </p></li><li data-counter=\"5.\"><p>Brasil S, Solla DJF, Nogueira RC, Teixeira MJ, Malbouisson LMS, Paiva WDS. A novel noninvasive technique for intracranial pressure waveform monitoring in critical care. J Pers Med. 2021;11(12):1302. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11121302.</p><p>Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar </p></li></ol><p>Download references<svg aria-hidden=\"true\" focusable=\"false\" height=\"16\" role=\"img\" width=\"16\"><use xlink:href=\"#icon-eds-i-download-medium\" xmlns:xlink=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink\"></use></svg></p><p>None.</p><p>Not applicable.</p><h3>Authors and Affiliations</h3><ol><li><p>Neurointensive Care Unit, Sanatorio Pasteur, Chacabuco 675, 4700, Catamarca, Argentina</p><p>Daniel Agustin Godoy</p></li><li><p>LIM 62, Department of Neurology, University of São Paulo Medical School, Sao Paulo, Brazil</p><p>Sergio Brasil & Andres M. Rubiano</p></li><li><p>Professor of Neurosciences and Neurosurgery, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia</p><p>Andres M. Rubiano</p></li><li><p>Medical and Research Director, MEDITECH Foundation, Cali, Colombia</p><p>Daniel Agustin Godoy, Sergio Brasil & Andres M. Rubiano</p></li></ol><span>Authors</span><ol><li><span>Daniel Agustin Godoy</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li><li><span>Sergio Brasil</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li><li><span>Andres M. Rubiano</span>View author publications<p>You can also search for this author in <span>PubMed<span> </span>Google Scholar</span></p></li></ol><h3>Contributions</h3><p>All author's contribute equally</p><h3>Corresponding author</h3><p>Correspondence to Daniel Agustin Godoy.</p><h3>Ethics approval and consent to participate</h3>\n<p>Not applicable.</p>\n<h3>Consent for publication</h3>\n<p>All authors give the consent to publish.</p>\n<h3>Competing interests</h3>\n<p>DAG and AMR claim no competing interest or conflict of interest. SB serves as a scientific advisor for brain4care.</p><h3>Publisher's Note</h3><p>Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.</p><p><b>Open Access</b> This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License, which permits any non-commercial use, sharing, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if you modified the licensed material. You do not have permission under this licence to share adapted material derived from this article or parts of it. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.</p>\n<p>Reprints and permissions</p><img alt=\"Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark\" height=\"81\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"data:image/svg+xml;base64,<svg height="81" width="57" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><g fill="none" fill-rule="evenodd"><path d="m17.35 35.45 21.3-14.2v-17.03h-21.3" fill="#989898"/><path d="m38.65 35.45-21.3-14.2v-17.03h21.3" fill="#747474"/><path d="m28 .5c-12.98 0-23.5 10.52-23.5 23.5s10.52 23.5 23.5 23.5 23.5-10.52 23.5-23.5c0-6.23-2.48-12.21-6.88-16.62-4.41-4.4-10.39-6.88-16.62-6.88zm0 41.25c-9.8 0-17.75-7.95-17.75-17.75s7.95-17.75 17.75-17.75 17.75 7.95 17.75 17.75c0 4.71-1.87 9.22-5.2 12.55s-7.84 5.2-12.55 5.2z" fill="#535353"/><path d="m41 36c-5.81 6.23-15.23 7.45-22.43 2.9-7.21-4.55-10.16-13.57-7.03-21.5l-4.92-3.11c-4.95 10.7-1.19 23.42 8.78 29.71 9.97 6.3 23.07 4.22 30.6-4.86z" fill="#9c9c9c"/><path d="m.2 58.45c0-.75.11-1.42.33-2.01s.52-1.09.91-1.5c.38-.41.83-.73 1.34-.94.51-.22 1.06-.32 1.65-.32.56 0 1.06.11 1.51.35.44.23.81.5 1.1.81l-.91 1.01c-.24-.24-.49-.42-.75-.56-.27-.13-.58-.2-.93-.2-.39 0-.73.08-1.05.23-.31.16-.58.37-.81.66-.23.28-.41.63-.53 1.04-.13.41-.19.88-.19 1.39 0 1.04.23 1.86.68 2.46.45.59 1.06.88 1.84.88.41 0 .77-.07 1.07-.23s.59-.39.85-.68l.91 1c-.38.43-.8.76-1.28.99-.47.22-1 .34-1.58.34-.59 0-1.13-.1-1.64-.31-.5-.2-.94-.51-1.31-.91-.38-.4-.67-.9-.88-1.48-.22-.59-.33-1.26-.33-2.02zm8.4-5.33h1.61v2.54l-.05 1.33c.29-.27.61-.51.96-.72s.76-.31 1.24-.31c.73 0 1.27.23 1.61.71.33.47.5 1.14.5 2.02v4.31h-1.61v-4.1c0-.57-.08-.97-.25-1.21-.17-.23-.45-.35-.83-.35-.3 0-.56.08-.79.22-.23.15-.49.36-.78.64v4.8h-1.61zm7.37 6.45c0-.56.09-1.06.26-1.51.18-.45.42-.83.71-1.14.29-.3.63-.54 1.01-.71.39-.17.78-.25 1.18-.25.47 0 .88.08 1.23.24.36.16.65.38.89.67s.42.63.54 1.03c.12.41.18.84.18 1.32 0 .32-.02.57-.07.76h-4.36c.07.62.29 1.1.65 1.44.36.33.82.5 1.38.5.29 0 .57-.04.83-.13s.51-.21.76-.37l.55 1.01c-.33.21-.69.39-1.09.53-.41.14-.83.21-1.26.21-.48 0-.92-.08-1.34-.25-.41-.16-.76-.4-1.07-.7-.31-.31-.55-.69-.72-1.13-.18-.44-.26-.95-.26-1.52zm4.6-.62c0-.55-.11-.98-.34-1.28-.23-.31-.58-.47-1.06-.47-.41 0-.77.15-1.07.45-.31.29-.5.73-.58 1.3zm2.5.62c0-.57.09-1.08.28-1.53.18-.44.43-.82.75-1.13s.69-.54 1.1-.71c.42-.16.85-.24 1.31-.24.45 0 .84.08 1.17.23s.61.34.85.57l-.77 1.02c-.19-.16-.38-.28-.56-.37-.19-.09-.39-.14-.61-.14-.56 0-1.01.21-1.35.63-.35.41-.52.97-.52 1.67 0 .69.17 1.24.51 1.66.34.41.78.62 1.32.62.28 0 .54-.06.78-.17.24-.12.45-.26.64-.42l.67 1.03c-.33.29-.69.51-1.08.65-.39.15-.78.23-1.18.23-.46 0-.9-.08-1.31-.24-.4-.16-.75-.39-1.05-.7s-.53-.69-.7-1.13c-.17-.45-.25-.96-.25-1.53zm6.91-6.45h1.58v6.17h.05l2.54-3.16h1.77l-2.35 2.8 2.59 4.07h-1.75l-1.77-2.98-1.08 1.23v1.75h-1.58zm13.69 1.27c-.25-.11-.5-.17-.75-.17-.58 0-.87.39-.87 1.16v.75h1.34v1.27h-1.34v5.6h-1.61v-5.6h-.92v-1.2l.92-.07v-.72c0-.35.04-.68.13-.98.08-.31.21-.57.4-.79s.42-.39.71-.51c.28-.12.63-.18 1.04-.18.24 0 .48.02.69.07.22.05.41.1.57.17zm.48 5.18c0-.57.09-1.08.27-1.53.17-.44.41-.82.72-1.13.3-.31.65-.54 1.04-.71.39-.16.8-.24 1.23-.24s.84.08 1.24.24c.4.17.74.4 1.04.71s.54.69.72 1.13c.19.45.28.96.28 1.53s-.09 1.08-.28 1.53c-.18.44-.42.82-.72 1.13s-.64.54-1.04.7-.81.24-1.24.24-.84-.08-1.23-.24-.74-.39-1.04-.7c-.31-.31-.55-.69-.72-1.13-.18-.45-.27-.96-.27-1.53zm1.65 0c0 .69.14 1.24.43 1.66.28.41.68.62 1.18.62.51 0 .9-.21 1.19-.62.29-.42.44-.97.44-1.66 0-.7-.15-1.26-.44-1.67-.29-.42-.68-.63-1.19-.63-.5 0-.9.21-1.18.63-.29.41-.43.97-.43 1.67zm6.48-3.44h1.33l.12 1.21h.05c.24-.44.54-.79.88-1.02.35-.24.7-.36 1.07-.36.32 0 .59.05.78.14l-.28 1.4-.33-.09c-.11-.01-.23-.02-.38-.02-.27 0-.56.1-.86.31s-.55.58-.77 1.1v4.2h-1.61zm-47.87 15h1.61v4.1c0 .57.08.97.25 1.2.17.24.44.35.81.35.3 0 .57-.07.8-.22.22-.15.47-.39.73-.73v-4.7h1.61v6.87h-1.32l-.12-1.01h-.04c-.3.36-.63.64-.98.86-.35.21-.76.32-1.24.32-.73 0-1.27-.24-1.61-.71-.33-.47-.5-1.14-.5-2.02zm9.46 7.43v2.16h-1.61v-9.59h1.33l.12.72h.05c.29-.24.61-.45.97-.63.35-.17.72-.26 1.1-.26.43 0 .81.08 1.15.24.33.17.61.4.84.71.24.31.41.68.53 1.11.13.42.19.91.19 1.44 0 .59-.09 1.11-.25 1.57-.16.47-.38.85-.65 1.16-.27.32-.58.56-.94.73-.35.16-.72.25-1.1.25-.3 0-.6-.07-.9-.2s-.59-.31-.87-.56zm0-2.3c.26.22.5.37.73.45.24.09.46.13.66.13.46 0 .84-.2 1.15-.6.31-.39.46-.98.46-1.77 0-.69-.12-1.22-.35-1.61-.23-.38-.61-.57-1.13-.57-.49 0-.99.26-1.52.77zm5.87-1.69c0-.56.08-1.06.25-1.51.16-.45.37-.83.65-1.14.27-.3.58-.54.93-.71s.71-.25 1.08-.25c.39 0 .73.07 1 .2.27.14.54.32.81.55l-.06-1.1v-2.49h1.61v9.88h-1.33l-.11-.74h-.06c-.25.25-.54.46-.88.64-.33.18-.69.27-1.06.27-.87 0-1.56-.32-2.07-.95s-.76-1.51-.76-2.65zm1.67-.01c0 .74.13 1.31.4 1.7.26.38.65.58 1.15.58.51 0 .99-.26 1.44-.77v-3.21c-.24-.21-.48-.36-.7-.45-.23-.08-.46-.12-.7-.12-.45 0-.82.19-1.13.59-.31.39-.46.95-.46 1.68zm6.35 1.59c0-.73.32-1.3.97-1.71.64-.4 1.67-.68 3.08-.84 0-.17-.02-.34-.07-.51-.05-.16-.12-.3-.22-.43s-.22-.22-.38-.3c-.15-.06-.34-.1-.58-.1-.34 0-.68.07-1 .2s-.63.29-.93.47l-.59-1.08c.39-.24.81-.45 1.28-.63.47-.17.99-.26 1.54-.26.86 0 1.51.25 1.93.76s.63 1.25.63 2.21v4.07h-1.32l-.12-.76h-.05c-.3.27-.63.48-.98.66s-.73.27-1.14.27c-.61 0-1.1-.19-1.48-.56-.38-.36-.57-.85-.57-1.46zm1.57-.12c0 .3.09.53.27.67.19.14.42.21.71.21.28 0 .54-.07.77-.2s.48-.31.73-.56v-1.54c-.47.06-.86.13-1.18.23-.31.09-.57.19-.76.31s-.33.25-.41.4c-.09.15-.13.31-.13.48zm6.29-3.63h-.98v-1.2l1.06-.07.2-1.88h1.34v1.88h1.75v1.27h-1.75v3.28c0 .8.32 1.2.97 1.2.12 0 .24-.01.37-.04.12-.03.24-.07.34-.11l.28 1.19c-.19.06-.4.12-.64.17-.23.05-.49.08-.76.08-.4 0-.74-.06-1.02-.18-.27-.13-.49-.3-.67-.52-.17-.21-.3-.48-.37-.78-.08-.3-.12-.64-.12-1.01zm4.36 2.17c0-.56.09-1.06.27-1.51s.41-.83.71-1.14c.29-.3.63-.54 1.01-.71.39-.17.78-.25 1.18-.25.47 0 .88.08 1.23.24.36.16.65.38.89.67s.42.63.54 1.03c.12.41.18.84.18 1.32 0 .32-.02.57-.07.76h-4.37c.08.62.29 1.1.65 1.44.36.33.82.5 1.38.5.3 0 .58-.04.84-.13.25-.09.51-.21.76-.37l.54 1.01c-.32.21-.69.39-1.09.53s-.82.21-1.26.21c-.47 0-.92-.08-1.33-.25-.41-.16-.77-.4-1.08-.7-.3-.31-.54-.69-.72-1.13-.17-.44-.26-.95-.26-1.52zm4.61-.62c0-.55-.11-.98-.34-1.28-.23-.31-.58-.47-1.06-.47-.41 0-.77.15-1.08.45-.31.29-.5.73-.57 1.3zm3.01 2.23c.31.24.61.43.92.57.3.13.63.2.98.2.38 0 .65-.08.83-.23s.27-.35.27-.6c0-.14-.05-.26-.13-.37-.08-.1-.2-.2-.34-.28-.14-.09-.29-.16-.47-.23l-.53-.22c-.23-.09-.46-.18-.69-.3-.23-.11-.44-.24-.62-.4s-.33-.35-.45-.55c-.12-.21-.18-.46-.18-.75 0-.61.23-1.1.68-1.49.44-.38 1.06-.57 1.83-.57.48 0 .91.08 1.29.25s.71.36.99.57l-.74.98c-.24-.17-.49-.32-.73-.42-.25-.11-.51-.16-.78-.16-.35 0-.6.07-.76.21-.17.15-.25.33-.25.54 0 .14.04.26.12.36s.18.18.31.26c.14.07.29.14.46.21l.54.19c.23.09.47.18.7.29s.44.24.64.4c.19.16.34.35.46.58.11.23.17.5.17.82 0 .3-.06.58-.17.83-.12.26-.29.48-.51.68-.23.19-.51.34-.84.45-.34.11-.72.17-1.15.17-.48 0-.95-.09-1.41-.27-.46-.19-.86-.41-1.2-.68z" fill="#535353"/></g></svg>\" width=\"57\"/><h3>Cite this article</h3><p>Godoy, D.A., Brasil, S. & Rubiano, A.M. Further support for the intracranial compartmental syndrome concept. <i>Crit Care</i> <b>28</b>, 311 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4</p><p>Download citation<svg aria-hidden=\"true\" focusable=\"false\" height=\"16\" role=\"img\" width=\"16\"><use xlink:href=\"#icon-eds-i-download-medium\" xmlns:xlink=\"http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink\"></use></svg></p><ul data-test=\"publication-history\"><li><p>Received<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-03-11\">11 March 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>Accepted<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-05-27\">27 May 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>Published<span>: </span><span><time datetime=\"2024-09-18\">18 September 2024</time></span></p></li><li><p>DOI</abbr><span>: </span><span>https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4</span></p></li></ul><h3>Share this article</h3><p>Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:</p><button data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"get shareable link\" data-track-external=\"\" data-track-label=\"button\" type=\"button\">Get shareable link</button><p>Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.</p><p data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"select share url\" data-track-label=\"button\"></p><button data-track=\"click\" data-track-action=\"copy share url\" data-track-external=\"\" data-track-label=\"button\" type=\"button\">Copy to clipboard</button><p> Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative </p>","PeriodicalId":10811,"journal":{"name":"Critical Care","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":8.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Critical Care","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The current approach to severe neuro-injury monitoring, especially traumatic brain injury (TBI), has experienced paradigm shifts that open a broad outlook for the future [1]. On one hand, advances in pathophysiological knowledge have made possible establishing today that intracranial pressure (ICP) control is just one more epiphenomenon within other serious events that occur simultaneously such as tissue hypoxia, metabolic crises and cerebral energy dysfunction [1]. On the other hand, the advent of new monitoring techniques (invasive and noninvasive) have allowed a deeper analysis in real time of what is happening in the injured brain [1]. One of the most important advancements in neuromonitoring was the recent popularization of the analysis of the ICP wave (ICPw) morphology. Current studies pointed the changes in ICPw as reliable markers of cerebrospinal compliance and to be followed in clinical environments. In this regard, ICPw was considered the pillar of the intracranial compartmental syndrome (ICCS) concept [2]. So, “ICCS occurs when the compliance of the intracranial system is compromised as a result of the exhaustion of the compensating mechanisms that try to keep it within normal limits’’. ‘’Perfusion, oxygenation and energy utilization compromise are its consequences’’ [2].
Further enlightenments raised from the recent study of Kazimierska et al., which evaluated a series of 130 patients who were victims of severe TBI from the CENTER-TBI database. Those authors analyzed the relationship between parameters obtained from the neuroimaging Computed Tomography (CT) scan upon admission and variables collected from invasive ICP monitoring [3]. Injury mass volume, degree of midline shift, Marshall’s and Rotterdam classifications were the data provided by the CT scans, while mean ICP values, wave amplitude and indices derived from the analysis of ICP recordings. A neural network model (previously tested with 93% accuracy) was applied in order to automatically group ICP waveforms into 4 classes [3]. As a main finding, the pulse shape index—PSI was strongly correlated with the analyzed tomographic parameters (p = 0.001), while mean ICP was correlated with ICPw amplitude, indicating that the morphology of the ICP pulse wave reflects a decrease in the cerebrospinal compensatory reserve therefore of cerebral compliance [3].
ICP waveform is a result of complex interaction between volumes (blood, brain and cerebrospinal fluid) restrained by meninges and the bony skull box, interacting with dynamic phenomena as blood viscosity, cardiac and respiratory cycles per example [1]. Therefore, several are the ways of exploring and translating ICPw into parameters readable at the bedside to assess compensatory reserve status. Prior to PSI, the compensatory reserve index (RAP) was described by Czosnyka et al. as the moving correlation between ICP values and ICP pulse amplitude variation [4]. Both the PSI and RAP can be assessed imputing ICP and further variables to the ICM + software (Cambridge Enterprise Ltd., Cambridge, UK). More recently, based on ICP waveform peak relationship changes following cerebral compliance status, Brasil et al. observed the P2/P1 ratio (the second peak amplitude elevation) and time-to-peak (the time length from pulse triggering to its highest peak amplitude) variations following an induced mild ICP variation in neurocritical patients, demonstrating that these parameters may also translate the pressure/volume intracranial relationship [5]. The latter parameters acquisition and assessment are available by means of noninvasive hardware, with potential to widening intracranial compliance applications beyond severe acute brain injuries.
With the infinite contribution which newer hardware and software offer in data acquisition and analysis, we reach assessment options to support the ICCS hypothesis, raising the foundations for developing multicenter prospective clinical studies and validate the concept on a large scale.
Not applicable.
TBI:
Traumatic brain injury
ICP:
Intracranial pressure
CT:
Computed tomography
ICCS:
Intracranial compartmental syndrome
PSI:
Pulse shape index
RAP:
Compensatory reserve index
ICM:
Intensive care monitor
Lazaridis C, Foreman B. Management strategies based on multi-modality neuromonitoring in severe traumatic brain injury. Neurotherapeutics. 2023;20(6):1457–71. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13311-023-01411-2.
Article PubMed Google Scholar
Godoy DA, Brasil S, Iaccarino C, et al. The intracranial compartmental syndrome: a proposed model for acute brain injury monitoring and management. Crit Care. 2023;27:137. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-023-04427-4.
Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
Kazimierska A, Uryga A, Mataczyński C, et al. Relationship between the shape of intracranial pressure pulse waveform and computed tomography characteristics in patients after traumatic brain injury. Crit Care. 2023;27:447. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-023-04731-z.
Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
Czosnyka M, Smielewski P, Timofeev I, Lavinio A, Guazzo E, Hutchinson P, et al. Intracranial pressure: more than a number. Neurosurg Focus. 2007;22(5):E10. https://doi.org/10.3171/foc.2007.22.5.11.
Article PubMed Google Scholar
Brasil S, Solla DJF, Nogueira RC, Teixeira MJ, Malbouisson LMS, Paiva WDS. A novel noninvasive technique for intracranial pressure waveform monitoring in critical care. J Pers Med. 2021;11(12):1302. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11121302.
Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
Download references
None.
Not applicable.
Authors and Affiliations
Neurointensive Care Unit, Sanatorio Pasteur, Chacabuco 675, 4700, Catamarca, Argentina
Daniel Agustin Godoy
LIM 62, Department of Neurology, University of São Paulo Medical School, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Sergio Brasil & Andres M. Rubiano
Professor of Neurosciences and Neurosurgery, Universidad El Bosque, Bogotá, Colombia
Andres M. Rubiano
Medical and Research Director, MEDITECH Foundation, Cali, Colombia
Daniel Agustin Godoy, Sergio Brasil & Andres M. Rubiano
Authors
Daniel Agustin GodoyView author publications
You can also search for this author in PubMedGoogle Scholar
Sergio BrasilView author publications
You can also search for this author in PubMedGoogle Scholar
Andres M. RubianoView author publications
You can also search for this author in PubMedGoogle Scholar
Contributions
All author's contribute equally
Corresponding author
Correspondence to Daniel Agustin Godoy.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
All authors give the consent to publish.
Competing interests
DAG and AMR claim no competing interest or conflict of interest. SB serves as a scientific advisor for brain4care.
Publisher's Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License, which permits any non-commercial use, sharing, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if you modified the licensed material. You do not have permission under this licence to share adapted material derived from this article or parts of it. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
Reprints and permissions
Cite this article
Godoy, D.A., Brasil, S. & Rubiano, A.M. Further support for the intracranial compartmental syndrome concept. Crit Care28, 311 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4
Download citation
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4
Share this article
Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:
Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.
Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative
Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar Czosnyka M, Smielewski P, Timofeev I, Lavinio A, Guazzo E, Hutchinson P, et al. 颅内压:不仅仅是一个数字。神经外科聚焦。https://doi.org/10.3171/foc.2007.22.5.11.Article PubMed Google Scholar Brasil S, Solla DJF, Nogueira RC, Teixeira MJ, Malbouisson LMS, Paiva WDS.重症监护中颅内压波形监测的新型无创技术。J Pers Med.2021;11(12):1302. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11121302.Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar Download referencesNone.Not applicable.Authors and AffiliationsNeurointensive Care Unit, Sanatorio Pasteur, Chacabuco 675, 4700, Catamarca, ArgentinaDaniel Agustin GodoyLIM 62, Department of Neurology, University of Sao Paulo Medical School, Sao Paulo, BrazilSergio Brasil & Andres M. RubianoProfessor of Neurology, University of Sao Paulo.Rubiano哥伦比亚波哥大 El Bosque 大学神经科学和神经外科教授Andres M. Rubiano哥伦比亚卡利 MEDITECH 基金会医学和研究主任Daniel Agustin Godoy, Sergio Brasil & Andres M. RubianoRubianoAuthorsDaniel Agustin GodoyView author publications您也可以在PubMed Google ScholarSergio BrasilView author publications您也可以在PubMed Google ScholarAndres M. RubianoView author publications您也可以在PubMed Google Scholar搜索该作者Rubiano查看作者发表的作品您还可以在PubMed Google Scholar中搜索该作者供稿所有作者的供稿均等通讯作者:Daniel Agustin Godoy伦理批准和参与同意书不适用同意发表所有作者同意发表竞业利益DAG和AMR声称没有竞业利益或利益冲突。开放获取本文采用知识共享署名-非商业性-禁止衍生 4.0 国际许可协议进行许可,该协议允许以任何媒介或格式进行任何非商业性使用、共享、分发和复制,只要您适当注明原作者和来源,提供知识共享许可协议的链接,并说明您是否修改了许可材料。根据本许可协议,您无权分享源自本文或本文部分内容的改编材料。本文中的图片或其他第三方材料均包含在文章的知识共享许可协议中,除非在材料的信用栏中另有说明。如果材料未包含在文章的知识共享许可协议中,且您打算使用的材料不符合法律规定或超出了许可使用范围,则您需要直接获得版权所有者的许可。如需查看该许可的副本,请访问 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.Reprints and permissionsCite this articleGodoy, D.A., Brasil, S. & Rubiano, A.M. Further support for the intracranial compartmental syndrome concept.Crit Care 28, 311 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4Download citationReceived:11 March 2024Accepted: 27 May 2024Published: 18 September 2024DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-024-04974-4Share this articleAnyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:Get shareable linkSorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.Copy to clipboard Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative
期刊介绍:
Critical Care is an esteemed international medical journal that undergoes a rigorous peer-review process to maintain its high quality standards. Its primary objective is to enhance the healthcare services offered to critically ill patients. To achieve this, the journal focuses on gathering, exchanging, disseminating, and endorsing evidence-based information that is highly relevant to intensivists. By doing so, Critical Care seeks to provide a thorough and inclusive examination of the intensive care field.