Guerci A D, Shi A Y, Levin H, Tsitlik J, Weisfeldt M L, Chandra N
Circ Res. 1985 Jan;56(1):20-30. doi: 10.1161/01.res.56.1.20.
Elevation of intrathoracic pressure during cardiopulmonary resuscitation generates carotid pressure and flow, but also increases intracranial pressure. This increase in intracranial pressure may limit cerebral blood flow. Therefore, we performed studies designed to quantify the extent of this transmission and to identify the mechanism of transmission of intrathoracic pressure to the intracranial space during cardiopulmonary resuscitation in dogs. Intracranial pressure increased during the chest compression phase of all modes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation tested. During simultaneous compression-ventilation cardiopulmonary resuscitation, change in intracranial pressure (mm Hg) = 0.33 change in intrathoracic pressure (mm Hg) + 2.02 (r = 0.86) and was not significantly different from the relationship observed during conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The magnitude of transmission of intrathoracic pressure to the intracranial space was increased by binding the abdomen and by raising the baseline intracranial pressure. No single route accounted for transmission of intrathoracic pressure to the intracranial space during cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Intracranial pressure fluctuations were unrelated to either carotid arterial or jugular venous pressure, and were found instead to be the result of pressure transmission by blood in non-valved veins and by cerebrospinal fluid. This was determined by three maneuvers. First, obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid flow by ligation of the cervical spinal cord reduced intracranial pressure (P less than 0.001) and made the change in intracranial pressure equivalent to pressure changes at the confluence of the intracranial venous sinuses, without affecting pressure changes at the confluence of the intracranial venous sinuses. Second, ligation of the cervical spinal cord and one of the two longitudinal vertebral veins adjacent to the cervical cord reduced the pressure changes in the intracranial space and at the confluence of the intracranial venous sinuses to about 60% of the levels observed when the cervical cord alone was ligated. Thus, the non-valved longitudinal vertebral veins appear to be the vascular channels of critical importance to pressure transmission. Finally, pressure changes in the thoracic cerebrospinal fluid were increased (P less than 0.05) by cord ligation, even after exsanguination minimized pressure transmission via blood-filled channels, indicating direct transmission of intrathoracic pressure through intervertebral foramina to the cerebrospinal fluid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
心肺复苏期间胸内压升高会产生颈动脉压力和血流,但也会增加颅内压。这种颅内压升高可能会限制脑血流量。因此,我们进行了一些研究,旨在量化这种压力传递的程度,并确定在狗的心肺复苏过程中胸内压向颅内空间传递的机制。在所有测试的心肺复苏模式的胸部按压阶段,颅内压都会升高。在同步按压-通气心肺复苏期间,颅内压变化(毫米汞柱)= 0.33×胸内压变化(毫米汞柱)+ 2.02(r = 0.86),且与传统心肺复苏期间观察到的关系无显著差异。通过束缚腹部和提高基线颅内压,胸内压向颅内空间的传递幅度会增加。在心肺复苏期间,没有单一途径可解释胸内压向颅内空间的传递。颅内压波动与颈动脉或颈静脉压力均无关,相反,发现其是由无瓣膜静脉中的血液和脑脊液进行压力传递的结果。这是通过三种操作确定的。首先,通过结扎颈脊髓来阻断脑脊液流动可降低颅内压(P < 0.001),并使颅内压变化等同于颅内静脉窦汇合处的压力变化,而不影响颅内静脉窦汇合处的压力变化。其次,结扎颈脊髓和与颈脊髓相邻的两条纵向椎静脉之一,可使颅内空间和颅内静脉窦汇合处的压力变化降低至单独结扎颈脊髓时观察到水平的约60%。因此,无瓣膜的纵向椎静脉似乎是对压力传递至关重要的血管通道。最后,即使放血使通过充血通道的压力传递最小化后,结扎脊髓仍会使胸段脑脊液中的压力变化增加(P < 0.05),这表明胸内压通过椎间孔直接传递至脑脊液。(摘要截断于400字)