Taylor William R, Chen Jeff W, Meltzer Hal, Gennarelli Thomas A, Kelbch Cynthia, Knowlton Sharen, Richardson Jenny, Lutch Matthew J, Farin Azadeh, Hults Kathryn N, Marshall Lawrence F
Division of Neurosurgery, University of California, San Diego Medical Center, San Diego, California, USA.
J Neurosurg. 2003 Jan;98(1):205-13. doi: 10.3171/jns.2003.98.1.0205.
The authors prospectively used a new hand-held point-and-shoot pupillometer to assess pupillary function quantitatively. Repetitive measurements were initially made in more than 300 healthy volunteers ranging in age from 1 to 87 years, providing a total of 2,432 paired (alternative right eye, left eye) measurements under varying light conditions. The authors studied 17 patients undergoing a variety of nonintracranial, nonophthalmological, endoscopic, or surgical procedures and 20 seniors in a cardiology clinic to learn more about the effects of a variety of drugs. Additionally, the authors carried out detailed studies in 26 adults with acute severe head injury in whom intracranial pressure (ICP) was continuously monitored. Finally, five patients suffering from subarachnoid hemorrhage were also studied. Quantitative pupillary measurements could be reliably replicated in the study participants. In healthy volunteers the resting pupillary aperture averaged 4.1 mm and the minimal aperture after stimulation was 2.7 mm, resulting in a 34% change in pupil size. Constriction velocity averaged 1.48 +/- 0.33 mm/second. Pupillary symmetry was striking in both healthy volunteers and patients without intracranial or uncorrected visual acuity disorders. In the 2,432 paired measurements in healthy volunteers, constriction velocity was noted to fall below 0.85 mm/second on only 33 occasions and below 0.6 mm/second on eight occasions (< one in 310 observations). In outpatients, the reduction in constriction velocity was observed when either oral or intravenous narcotic agents and diazepam analogs were administered. These effects were transient and always symmetrical. Among the 26 patients with head injuries, eight were found to have elevations of ICP above 20 mm Hg and pupillary dynamics in each of these patients remained normal. In 13 patients with a midline shift greater than 3 mm, elevations of ICP above 20 mm Hg, when present for 15 minutes, were frequently associated with a reduction in constriction velocity on the side of the mass effect to below 0.6 mm/second (51% of 156 paired observations). In five patients with diffuse brain swelling but no midline shift, a reduction in constriction velocities did not generally occur until the ICP exceeded 30 mm Hg. Changes in the percentage of reduction from the resting state following stimulation were always greater than 10%, even in patients receiving large doses of morphine and propofol in whom the ICP was lower than 20 mm Hg. Asymmetry of pupillary size greater than 0.5 mm was observed infrequently (< 1%) in healthy volunteers and was rarely seen in head-injured patients unless the ICP exceeded 20 mm Hg. Pupillometry is a reliable technology capable of providing repetitive data on quantitative pupillary function in states of health and disease.
作者前瞻性地使用一种新型手持式即拍型瞳孔计对瞳孔功能进行定量评估。最初,他们对300多名年龄在1至87岁的健康志愿者进行了重复测量,在不同光照条件下共获得2432对(右眼与左眼交替)测量数据。作者研究了17例接受各种非颅内、非眼科、内镜或外科手术的患者以及20例心脏病诊所的老年人,以进一步了解各种药物的作用。此外,作者还对26例急性重型颅脑损伤且持续监测颅内压(ICP)的成年人进行了详细研究。最后,还对5例蛛网膜下腔出血患者进行了研究。在研究参与者中,瞳孔的定量测量结果能够可靠地重复。在健康志愿者中,静息瞳孔孔径平均为4.1mm,刺激后的最小孔径为2.7mm,瞳孔大小变化为34%。收缩速度平均为1.48±0.33mm/秒。在健康志愿者和无颅内或未矫正视力障碍的患者中,瞳孔对称性都很明显。在健康志愿者的2432对测量中,收缩速度仅在33次测量中低于0.85mm/秒,在8次测量中低于0.6mm/秒(<310次观察中有1次)。在门诊患者中,口服或静脉注射麻醉剂及地西泮类似物后观察到收缩速度降低。这些影响是短暂的,且总是对称的。在26例颅脑损伤患者中,8例患者的ICP升高超过20mmHg,且这些患者的瞳孔动态均保持正常。在13例中线移位大于3mm的患者中,当ICP升高超过20mmHg并持续15分钟时,经常会出现占位效应一侧的收缩速度降低至低于0.6mm/秒(156对观察中有51%)。在5例弥漫性脑肿胀但无中线移位的患者中,通常直到ICP超过30mmHg时收缩速度才会降低。即使在接受大剂量吗啡和丙泊酚且ICP低于20mmHg的患者中,刺激后静息状态下缩小百分比的变化也总是大于10%。在健康志愿者中,瞳孔大小不对称大于0.5mm的情况很少见(<1%),在颅脑损伤患者中也很少见,除非ICP超过20mmHg。瞳孔测量是一项可靠的技术,能够提供健康和疾病状态下瞳孔定量功能的重复数据。