This site usescookies, tags, and tracking settings to store information that help give you the very best browsing experience. Dismiss this warning

Search Results

You are looking at1-2of2items for

  • Author or Editor: Petar M. Djurićx
  • Refine by Access: allx
Clear All Modify Search
Free access

Zhe Wang, Liu Yang, Petar M. Djurić, and Michael R. Egnor

OBJECTIVE

Pseudotumor cerebri is a disorder of intracranial dynamics characterized by elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) and chronic cerebral venous hypertension without structural abnormalities. A perplexing feature of pseudotumor is the absence of the ventriculomegaly found in obstructive hydrocephalus, although both diseases are associated with increased resistance to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) resorption. Traditionally, the pathophysiology of ventricular dilation and obstructive hydrocephalus has been attributed to the backup of CSF due to impaired absorption, and it is unclear why backup of CSF with resulting ventriculomegaly would not occur in pseudotumor. In this study, the authors used an electrical circuit model to simulate the cerebral windkessel effect and explain the presence of ventriculomegaly in obstructive hydrocephalus but not in pseudotumor cerebri.

开云体育世界杯赔率

The cerebral windkessel is a band-stop filter that dampens the arterial blood pressure pulse in the cranium. The authors used a tank circuit with parallel inductance and capacitance to model the windkessel. The authors distinguished the smooth flow of blood and CSF and the pulsatile flow of blood and CSF by using direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC) sources, respectively. The authors measured the dampening notch from ABP to ICP as the band-stop filter of the windkessel.

RESULTS

In obstructive hydrocephalus, loss of CSF pathway volume impaired the flow of AC power in the cranium and caused windkessel impairment, to which ventriculomegaly is an adaptation. In pseudotumor, venous hypertension affected DC power flow in the capillaries but did not affect AC power or the windkessel, therefore obviating the need for adaptive ventriculomegaly.

CONCLUSIONS

In pseudotumor, the CSF spaces are unaffected and the windkessel remains effective. Therefore, ventricles remain normal in size. In hydrocephalus, the windkessel, which depends on the flow of AC power in patent CSF spaces, is impaired, and the ventricles dilate as an adaptive process to restore CSF pathway volume. The windkessel model explains both ventriculomegaly in obstructive hydrocephalus and the lack of ventriculomegaly in pseudotumor. This model provides a novel understanding of the pathophysiology of disorders of CSF dynamics and has significant implications in clinical management.

Open access

Michael Egnor, Liu Yang, Racheed M. Mani, Susan M. Fiore, and Petar M. Djurić

OBJECTIVE

Traditional models of intracranial dynamics fail to capture several important features of the intracranial pressure (ICP) pulse. Experiments show that, at a local amplitude minimum, the ICP pulse normally precedes the arterial blood pressure (ABP) pulse, and the cranium is a band-stop filter centered at the heart rate for the ICP pulse with respect to the ABP pulse, which is the cerebral windkessel mechanism. These observations are inconsistent with existing pressure-volume models.

开云体育世界杯赔率

To explore these issues, the authors modeled the ABP and ICP pulses by using a simple electrical tank circuit, and they compared the dynamics of the circuit to physiological data from dogs by using autoregressive with exogenous inputs (ARX) modeling.

RESULTS

The authors’ ARX analysis showed close agreement between the circuit and pulse suppression in the canine cranium, and they used the analogy between the circuit and the cranium to examine the dynamics that underlie this pulse suppression.

CONCLUSIONS

之间的通信和生理数据circuit dynamics suggests that the cerebral windkessel consists of the rhythmic motion of the brain parenchyma and CSF that continuously opposes systolic and diastolic blood flow. Such motion has been documented with flow-sensitive MRI. In thermodynamic terms, the direct current (DC) power of cerebral arterial perfusion drives smooth capillary flow and alternating current (AC) power shunts pulsatile energy through the CSF to the veins. This suggests that hydrocephalus and related disorders are disorders of CSF path impedance. Obstructive hydrocephalus is the consequence of high CSF path impedance due to high resistance. Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is the consequence of high CSF path impedance due to low inertance and high compliance. Low-pressure hydrocephalus is the consequence of high CSF path impedance due to high resistance and high compliance. Ventriculomegaly is an adaptive physiological response that increases CSF path volume and thereby reduces CSF path resistance and impedance. Pseudotumor cerebri is the consequence of high DC power with normal CSF path impedance. CSF diversion by shunting is an accessory windkessel—it drains energy (and thereby lowers ICP) and lowers CSF path resistance and impedance. Cushing’s reflex is an accessory windkessel in extremis—it maintains DC power (arterial hypertension) and reduces AC power (bradycardia). The windkessel theory is a thermodynamic approach to the study of energy flow through the cranium, and it points to a new understanding of hydrocephalus and related disorders.

Baidu
map