Title: Increased Intracranial Pressure
1Increased Intracranial Pressure
- Mary Ann Reilly
- BSN, MS, CRRN
- Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, Rehab Nurse
Manager
2- In 2004 the SJ Mercury wrote "As he was giving
his speech he stumbled slightly and then he
started to perspire a bit. I thought almost
immediately that something is not right. - His repeated vomiting prompted paramedics to
treat him with oxygen and monitor his heart for
half an hour -- routine care for a sudden
food-borne illness
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4- The initial suspicion that Mayor Ron Gonzales had
food poisoning Wednesday night shows just how
difficult some strokes are to detect -- and
experts say it offers a warning to people who
might find themselves with similar symptoms.
5- Gonzales' type of stroke is called an
intraventricular hemorrhage. - This means that a blood vessel had broken and was
leaking into the ventricle, which carries spinal
fluid.
6So whats the big deal?
7- Components of Cranial Vault
- Meninges
- Dura
- Arachnoid
- Pia
- Brain
- Brain tissue 80-88
- Blood
- Blood 2-11
- CSF
- CSF 9-10
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9http//learntech.uwe.ac.uk/neuroanatomy/neuro4_1.h
tm
10- Blood
- 15-20 of the cardiac output
- 20-25 of all oxygen inspired
- 750cc/min
- 80 from carotid arteries
- 20 from vertebral
- Circle of Willis is collateral circulation
- No sugar/fat/oxygen storage
11Autoregulation
- When intra-cranial pressure begins to rise, the
bodys own compensatory mechanisms include
decreasing the production of CSF and restricting
the blood flow to the brain(by vasoconstriction).
12Autoregulation
- Self Regulated
- PCO2 (carbon dioxide) vasodilator
- For every 1mmHg change in PCO2 there is a 1-2cc
change in blood flow per 100 GMs of brain - (1300-1400Gms avg. wt.) s 750 65 or 750
130 - Diameter of vessels
- Hypercapnia Increases CBF
- Hypocapnia Decreases CBF
13Intercrainial Pressure Regulation
- When BP increases, cerebral arterioles constrict
to keep blood entering brain at steady rate. - When BP falls, cerebral arterioles dilate to
increase blood flow to brain
14Intercrainial Pressure Regulation
- Metabolic regulationchanges in O2 and CO2 Low
O2 and increased CO2 cause vasodilation CSF
regulationdecreased production or increased
reabsorption decreases ICP.
15Factors Affecting CBF
- Viscosity of the blood
- Seizures
- Anemia
- Drugs
16CSF
- 125-150 cc clear fluid
- 500cc produced per day
- 20cc per hour
- Replaced 4-7 times per day
- Function
- Protection, cushions
- Waster disposal
- Nutritional support (2/3 bodies BS)
17CSF Pressure
- Norm
- 1-15 mmHg or lt200mm H2O
- Low pressure
- Dehydration
- Increased pressure
- Val Salva,Tumor, Subdural Hematoma, Subarachnoid
Hemorrhage, Infections, Hydrocephalus
18Symptoms of Increasing ICP
- Headache
- Visual changes
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Behavior changes
- Changes in LOC
- Seizures
19Symptoms
- Aniscoria
- Hemiparesis
- Vital sign changes
- Cushing Triad
20Pulse Cardiac center is located in the medulla compression may affect heart rate
Temperature Raised indicates infection Hypothermia seen in drug overdose
Blood Pressure Increase associated with sympathetic stimulation. Decrease rarely attributed to brain injury
Respiration Increase may indicate damage to the midbrain. Decrease may indicate damage to lower pons and upper medulla
Pupils One reacting the other not may indicate pressure on the to the 3rd cranial nerve caused by I-ICP or a lesion
http//learntech.uwe.ac.uk/neuroanatomy/neuro4_4.h
tm
21Cushings Triad
- Vital Sign Changes in ICP
- Systolic pressure increases (widened pulse
pressure results). - Slowing of heart occursbradycardia (occurs as
result of reflexive slowing in response to
increased systolic pressure) - Respiration changesbecomes slowed
22Could it be?
- Difficulty speaking
- Blurred vision
- Hypertension
- Shallow rapid breathing
- Visual disturbances
- Paresthesia
- Hypoglycemia
23OR?
- - Confusion
- Lethargy
- Nausea Vomiting
- Coma
- Seizures
- Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH
24OR?
- Changes in LOC
- Nausea Vomiting
- Irritability
- Disorientation
- Personality changes
- Seizures
- Fluid Overload
25OR?
- Street drug
- Alcohol withdrawal
- Over dose
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Hypervitiaminosis A
- Drug
- www.merck.com/mrkshared/mmanual/section1/chapter3/
3c.jsp
26Diagnosis of Increased Intracranial Pressure
- Overt symptoms
- Papilledema
- Nuchal rigidity
- Lumbar Puncture
27Lumbar Puncture
- Contraindicated
- Focal signs
- Intracranial mass
- Papilledema
- Cardiorespiratory compromise
- Infection of skin
28Rational for Contraindication
Performing a LP in the presence of I-ICP, may
result in herniation
29Herniation
- Tentorium
- Midbrain and diencephalon through the
tentorium - Uncal
- Tonsillar
- Cerebellar tonsils
through the foramen magnum
30Diencephalic Stage
- Confused and drowsy
- Constricted pupils
- Gaze palsies
31Mesencephalic Stage
- Unconscious
- Decerebrate posturing
- Dilated pupils
- Hyperventilation
32Pontine Stage
- Unconscious
- Decerebrate posturing
- Constricted pupils
- Irregular breathing
33Decorticate posture
- Indicated by rigidity, flexion of the arms,
clenched fists, and extended legs. The arms are
bent inward toward the body with the wrists and
fingers bent and held on the chest. Presence of
this type of posturing implies severe damage to
the brain with immediate need for medical
attention.
34Decerebrate Posturing
- Internal rotation and extension of the arms
lower limb extension - Due to midbrain compression as the brainstem is
further compressed
35Medullary Stage
- Unconscious
- Flaccid
- Loss of homeostatic control
- Increase heart rate
- Decrease blood pressure
- Hyperthermia
- Cheyne-Stokes breathing
36Cheyne-Stokes
- Breathing describes a waxing and waning
ventilation, sometimes with periods of apnea,
that occur in cycles. - It is due to a delay in the medullary
chemoreceptor response to blood gas changes
37http//thediagram.com/3_6/
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40Common Causes of I-ICP
- Vascular abnormalities
- AV malformations, aneurisms, stroke
- Diffuse cerebral ischemia
- Closed head trauma, shaken baby, vasospasm
- CNS infections
- Tumors
- Trauma
- Obstruction of CSF flow
41Hydrochepalus
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43Intra Cerebral Hemorrhage
44AV Malformation
45Crainal Defect
46Crainial defect with midline shift
47- The Monroe-Kelle Hypothesis states that an
increase in the volume of one component (blood,
brain tissue, CSF) must be accompanied by a
decrease in another component if intracranial
pressure is to remain constant. The CSF and blood
volume are the compartments that most easily
change to accommodate changes in pressure.Â
Interventions to prevent secondary brain injury
follows these principles and focuses primarily on
cerebral blood flow and drainage.Â
48Management / Trauma
- Rapid transportation
- Early intubation
- Aggressive resuscitation
- Immediate CT
- ICP monitoring
49 CAT Scans
- Sensitivity for visualizing blood approximately
96 - Visualizes
- Fractures
- Hematomas
50Operative Management
- Burr holes
- Intra-operative ultra sound
- Surgical evacuation of mass lesion
- Craniotomy
- Craniectomy
- Ventricular drainage
http//www.trauma.org/neuro/neuromonitor.html
51Medical Management
- Adequate cerebral perfusion
- Dehydration
- Hypovolemia
- Hypoxia
- Hyperventilation
- Sepsis
- Normal or hypothermia
- Hyperthermia causes increased cellular metabolism
(10-13), increased lactic acid production,
increased CO2 (vasodilatation)
52Osmotic DiureticsMannitol
- Reduces ICP in 5-10 min. trough osmotic gradient
- BBB must be intact
- Removes H2O not Na
- Caution with
- Hypotension
- Coagulopathy
- CHF
53Duiretics
- Furosemide (lasix)
- Loop of Henle, blocks transport of Cl Na
- Reduced CSF production 40-70
- Postssium depletion
54Other Medications
- Corticosteroids
- H2 Blockers
- Sedation to control agitation, reduces metabolic
needs - Analgesia
- Barbiturates to suppress seizures, decreases
metabolic needs, vasoactive effects
55Hypothermia
- Decreased cellular metabolism
- Brain temp is 2.0o F higher than body
- Reduces inflammatory process
- Reduces cerebral metabolism
- Limits secondary brain injury
56Nutrition
- Energy requirement 125-200 ABOVE normal
- Early feeding has a favorable effect on survival
- TPN PPN
57Nursing Care
- Assessment
- Touch
- Oxygen
- Control pain
- Medicate prior to administering care
- Break up activities
58Care
- Decrease stimulation
- Positioning
- Bowel
- Bladder
59Glascow Coma Scale
Verbal Eye opening Motor
Score Finding Score Finding Score Finding
Normal fluent appropriate Confused but fluent Mumbling occasional word recognizable Vocalizations but no words No vocalizations or verbalizations Eyes open without stimulation Eyes open to loud noise Eyes open to pain only 1 No eye opening Follows commands Locates pain stimulus Pulls away from pain Flexion posture to pain Extension posture to pain 1 No motor response
60- www.rad.usuhs.mil/rad/herniation
- www.thridage.com/health/adam/ency/article
- www.homestead.com/emguidemaps/files/coma.html
- www.classes.kuma.edu/sm/nurs420
- www.emguidemaps.homestead.com/files/anisocoria.htm
l - 6. www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/130
/5/427/F1 - www.med.harvard.edu/AANLIB/home.html
- http//thediagram.com/3_6/
61http//www.sophysa.com/patient/hydrocephalus/hydro
cephalus3.htm
62Lumbo-Peritoneal Shunt                          Â
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63LEONARDO DA VINCI - Drawing of the cerebral
ventricles after they have been injected with a
dye
64Speech arrest
65Fluent Aphasia
This large cerebral infarct occurred in the
setting of atrial fibrillation and caused a dense
fluent aphasia. The CT scan shown here was
obtained 5 days after the onset of stroke
symptoms. View the temporal movie of this slice
to see the evolution of the lesion over the 5 day
period. Significant swelling in the infarcted
area produces obvious shift of the midline by day
5. This corresponded clinically to a diminished
level of arousal, which resolved after 2 days.
66Cant read
67Hesitating Speech
68Loss of sensation
69Chronic Subdural
70Cavenous angioma
71AV Malformation with MRA
72Acute Stroke
sudden onset of right body weakness and trouble
speaking
Diffusion-weighted MR showed a large area of
abnormal signal in the region clinically
suspected the portion of left hemisphere
supplied by the middle cerebral artery.
73Normal aging brain
74Normal aging
75Normal Aging coronal plane
http//www.med.harvard.edu/AANLIB/home.html
76Cerebral Hemorrhage
77MS
Look at the large round white spot in the right
frontal region. This is a relatively new lesion,
and you can see how it enlarges very rapidly over
the next weeks. Look at the timeline cine. With
time, the lesion enlarges, there is a "halo" of
white (high) signal which surrounds the lesion.
This probably represents the edema which forms in
reaction to the acute damage. At the end of the
movie, you can see that the lesion has nearly
disappeared, with another lesions appearing
78http//www.neuroland.com/default_old.htm
79http//www.neuroland.com/nm/neuropathic_pain.htm
80Burst arteries cause Increased ICP by
81- Increased Intracrainal PressureNormal
intracrainal pressureless than 15mm Hg or 180mm
H20. ICP considered when pressure than this.
When ICP ischemia and hypoxia results and
damages neural tissue. If ICP continuescan
cause herniation syndrome.
82- Causes of ICPBrain tumors, abscesses, cerebral
edema from injuries. CSF obstructionproduces
hydrocephalus Communicating vs. non-communicating
Cerebral vasodilationcompensatory mechanism for
conditions of hypoxia (when pCO2 , cerebral
vasodilation will occur).
83- Head InjuriesSkull fractureslinear, comminuted,
depressed or basilar Basilar (occurs at base of
skull)produces hemorrhage from nose, pharynx,
ears Bruising over mastoid boneBattles sign May
cause CSF leaking from ears, nose Brain
Injuries--Concussion vs. Contusion Intracranial
HemorrhageEpidural vs. Subdural Hematoma
84- Epidural HematomaBlood collects in the epidural
space Expanding hematoma causes rapid symptoms of
I.C.P. and is considered medical emergency
Treatmentsurgical openings through skull (burr
holes) to decrease I.C.P., craniotomy may be
necessary to remove clot and control bleeding
85- Subdural HematomaCollection of blood between dura
and the brain May be venous in origin, may be
acute, subacute, or chronic depending on size of
vessel and amount of bleeding Acutecause is
major head injury, symptoms develop over 24-48
hrs. Subacuteless severe trauma, symptoms
develop over 48 hrs. to 2 weeks Chroniccause is
minor trauma, seen in elderly, symptoms develop
over 3 weeks to 3 months
86- Treatment of ICPHyperventilationblow off CO2.
Osmotic diuretics--serum osmolarity Mannitol
(Osmitrol) Hypertonic Glucose Loop diuretics
SteroidsIV or p.o. Dexamethosone (Decadron)
Methylprednisolone (Solu-Medrol)
87- Treatment of ICP cont.Anticonvulsantsprevent
seizures IV fluidskeep moderately dehydrated
GIVE 0.45 to 0.9 NaCl AVOID 5 Dextrose
Barbiturates may be used in extreme cases in
order to induce coma and decrease metabolic
demands on brain.
88- Brain tumors Classified by site, histologic cell
type, degree of malignancy Gliomasarise from
neuroglia tissue Medulloblastomamalignant tumor
of cerebellum Menigiomasarise from meniges, slow
growing Acoustic neuromasarise from 8th cranial
nerve Pituitaryarise from pituitary gland, slow
growing Location of tumors (in cerebral lobes)
account for specific symptoms
89- Symptoms of Brain Tumors Classic symptoms of
I.C.P. Headache may be worse in A.M. Seizures are
common with all types of brain tumors Other
symptoms depends on location of tumor within the
cerebral lobes (occipital, frontal, parietal,
temporal, cerebellar)
90- Treatment of brain tumorsTumor reductionsurgery,
radiation, chemotherapy Manage and prevent
symptoms of I.C.P. Crainotomy Supratentorial
approachabove the tentorium (fold of dura
separating cerebral cortex from cerebellum and
brainstem Infratentorial approach---below the
tentorium
91- Pre-op Nursing CareShaving headpermit needed,
save hair, provide cap Teach deep breathing and
leg exercises (no coughing) Pre-op enema is
controversial Excellent baseline assessments
necessary pre-op
92- Post-op Nursing CareSupratentorial
ApproachH.O.B. 30-45 degrees Pillow under head
and shoulder, align neck Avoid positioning on
operative side Monitor for cranial nerve
dysfunction II-visual deficits III-ptosis IV,
Vdeficits in extraocular movements
93- Post-op Nursing Care for Infratentorial
ApproachH.O.B. flat, keep client off back Small
pillow under head, neck alignment Monitor for
cranial nerve dysfunction III, IV, VIocular
movements VIIabsent corneal reflex, paralysis of
facial muscles VIIIdecreased hearing, nystagmus
IX, Xgag and swallowing reflex decreased
94- Nursing Care Common to both surgical
approachesContinuous neuro assessments,
especially for I.C.P. Anticonvulsants, seizure
precautions Body temperature regulation, prevent
hyperthermia Turn, deep breath q. 2 hrs.
Reinforce dressingscheck for CSF on drainage
Pain managementuse of Codeine
95- S.I.A.D.H. Posterior pituitary secretes ADH to
regulate water balance Too much ADH causes
S.I.A.D.H. where kidneys will retain H2O and
blood serum will be hypotonic Signs and symptoms
Changes in L.O.C., headache, nausea and vomiting
Decreased urinary output
96- Treatment of S.I.A.D.H.Fluid restriction 500cc or
less in 24 hrs. IV fluids 3 or 5 saline with
appropriate electrolyte replacements (K, Mg)
Diuretics (Lasix) Lithium Carbonate
97- Diabetes InsipidusFailure of ADH secretion and
failure of kidneys to store H2O. Signs and
symptoms Urinary output increased with specific
gravity of urine decreased Client will have
dehydration Treatment Use of Vasopressin
(Pitressin), given I.M. or s.c.
http//academic.luzerne.edu/aisaacs/webversion/nur
204-2003/03increasedintracrainalpressure_files/fra
me.htm