Fried A, Shapiro K, Takei F, Kohn I
J Neurosurg. 1987 May;66(5):734-40. doi: 10.3171/jns.1987.66.5.0734.
This study was designed to determine whether implanting shunts in hydrocephalic cats produced the same biomechanical changes as have previously been found in children with shunts. Neuraxis volume-buffering capacity (pressure-volume index: PVI) and the resistance to the absorption of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were determined before and 3 weeks after placing shunts in 16 hydrocephalic cats. Intracranial pressure (ICP) was monitored for at least 6 hours after the shunts were occluded. The brains were perfused in vivo and removed to assess the size of the ventricles. The mean PVI of the hydrocephalic cats was 3.6 +/- 0.2 ml (+/- standard error of the mean) before the shunts were placed. Three weeks after adequate shunt function was first established, the mean PVI decreased to 1.1 +/- 0.1 ml and was similar to values determined in control animals. Prior to shunt placement, the resistance to the absorption of CSF was 28.4 +/- 4.5 mm Hg/ml/min and did not vary with ICP. This parameter changed after shunting and increased as a function of ICP (r = 0.87, p less than 0.001). At ICP's below 20 mm Hg, the resistance to the absorption of CSF was 65.0 +/- 18.0 mm Hg/ml/min but increased to 220.0 +/- 40.5 mm Hg/ml/min when determined at ICP's above 20 mm Hg. Corroborating evidence for this linkage of resistance to the absorption of CSF to ICP was found in the inexorable rise of ICP during the 6 hours of monitoring after the shunts were occluded. After shunt placement, the ventricles were normal in size in 12 cats and slightly enlarged in four. The biomechanical profile and pressure response to shunt occlusion in this laboratory model resembles that previously described in shunt-dependent children. As in humans, shunt placement in hydrocephalic cats results in normalization of the PVI and a linkage of the resistance to the absorption of CSF to ICP. The significance of these changes as they relate to shunt dependency is discussed.
本研究旨在确定在脑积水猫中植入分流管是否会产生与先前在分流管治疗的儿童中发现的相同生物力学变化。在16只脑积水猫中,于放置分流管前及放置后3周测定神经轴容积缓冲能力(压力-容积指数:PVI)和脑脊液(CSF)吸收阻力。在分流管闭塞后至少监测6小时颅内压(ICP)。对大脑进行活体灌注并取出以评估脑室大小。在放置分流管前,脑积水猫的平均PVI为3.6±0.2 ml(±平均标准误差)。在首次建立充分的分流功能3周后,平均PVI降至1.1±0.1 ml,与在对照动物中测定的值相似。在放置分流管前,CSF吸收阻力为28.4±4.5 mmHg/ml/min,且不随ICP变化。该参数在分流后发生改变,并随ICP升高而增加(r = 0.87,p<0.001)。在ICP低于20 mmHg时,CSF吸收阻力为65.0±18.0 mmHg/ml/min,但在ICP高于20 mmHg时测定,该阻力增加至220.0±40.5 mmHg/ml/min。在分流管闭塞后的6小时监测期间ICP持续升高,这一现象为CSF吸收阻力与ICP之间的这种关联提供了确证。放置分流管后,12只猫的脑室大小正常,4只猫的脑室稍增大。该实验室模型中的生物力学特征及对分流管闭塞的压力反应类似于先前在依赖分流管的儿童中所描述的情况。与人类一样,在脑积水猫中放置分流管会使PVI正常化,并使CSF吸收阻力与ICP相关联。讨论了这些变化与分流管依赖的相关性的意义。