Jonkman E J, Tans J T, Mosmans P C
J Neurol. 1978 Jun 16;218(3):157-69. doi: 10.1007/BF00313009.
In patients with severe brain lesions monitoring of the intracranial pressure as well as monitoring of cerebral blood flow can be of clinical value. While at the moment there is no atraumatic method for measuring cerebral blood flow in man, it is recommended to measure blood flow velocity with the ultrasound Doppler technic in the common carotid artery. On theoretical grounds a positive correlation between cerebral blood flow and blood flow velocity can be expected and the observations presented show that such a correlation exists in normal controls and in neurological patients. In many neurological patients the flow velocity in the common carotid artery decreases with increasing intracranial pressure. This suggests that the autoregulation is disturbed. The demonstration of such a disturbance can have clinical implications.