Martin N A, Doberstein C, Zane C, Caron M J, Thomas K, Becker D P
Cerebral Blood Flow Laboratory, University of California, Los Angeles Medical Center.
J Neurosurg. 1992 Oct;77(4):575-83. doi: 10.3171/jns.1992.77.4.0575.
Thirty patients admitted after suffering closed head injuries, with Glasgow Coma Scale scores ranging from 3 to 15, were evaluated with transcranial Doppler ultrasound monitoring. Blood flow velocity was determined in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and the intracranial portion of the internal carotid artery (ICA) in all patients. Because proximal flow in the extracranial ICA declines in velocity when arterial narrowing becomes hemodynamically significant, the extracranial ICA velocity was concurrently monitored in 19 patients. To assess cerebral perfusion, cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements obtained with the intravenous 133Xe technique were completed in 16 patients. Vasospasm, designated as MCA velocity exceeding 120 cm/sec, was found in eight patients (26.7%). Severe vasospasm, defined as MCA velocity greater than 200 cm/sec, occurred in three patients, and was confirmed by angiography in all three. Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) was documented by computerized tomography in five (62.5%) of the eight patients with vasospasm. All cases of severe vasospasm were associated with subarachnoid blood. The time course of vasospasm in patients with traumatic SAH was similar to that found in patients with aneurysmal SAH; in contrast, arterial spasm not associated with SAH demonstrated an uncharacteristically short duration (mean 1.25 days), suggesting that this may be a different type of spasm. A significant correlation (p less than 0.05) was identified between the lowest CBF and highest MCA velocity in patients during the period of vasospasm, indicating that arterial narrowing can lead to impaired CBF. Ischemic brain damage was found in one patient who had evidence of cerebral infarction in the territories supplied by the arteries affected by spasm. These findings demonstrate that delayed cerebral arterial spasm is a frequent complication of closed head injury and that the severity of spasm is, in some cases, comparable to that seen in aneurysmal SAH. This experience suggests that vasospasm is an important secondary posttraumatic insult that is potentially treatable.
30例闭合性颅脑损伤患者入院,格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分在3至15分之间,接受了经颅多普勒超声监测。测定了所有患者大脑中动脉(MCA)和颈内动脉(ICA)颅内段的血流速度。由于当动脉狭窄在血流动力学上变得显著时,颅外ICA近端血流速度会下降,因此对19例患者同时监测了颅外ICA速度。为评估脑灌注,16例患者完成了静脉注射133Xe技术测定脑血流量(CBF)。8例患者(26.7%)出现血管痉挛,定义为MCA速度超过120 cm/秒。3例患者出现严重血管痉挛,定义为MCA速度大于200 cm/秒,所有3例均经血管造影证实。8例血管痉挛患者中有5例(62.5%)经计算机断层扫描证实有蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)。所有严重血管痉挛病例均与蛛网膜下腔出血有关。创伤性SAH患者的血管痉挛时间进程与动脉瘤性SAH患者相似;相比之下,与SAH无关的动脉痉挛持续时间异常短(平均1.25天),提示这可能是一种不同类型的痉挛。在血管痉挛期间,患者最低CBF与最高MCA速度之间存在显著相关性(p<0.05),表明动脉狭窄可导致CBF受损。1例患者在受痉挛影响动脉供血区域出现脑梗死证据,发现有缺血性脑损伤。这些发现表明,迟发性脑动脉痉挛是闭合性颅脑损伤的常见并发症,在某些情况下,痉挛严重程度与动脉瘤性SAH所见相当。这一经验表明,血管痉挛是一种重要的创伤后继发性损伤,有可能得到治疗。