CSF and Intracranial Pressure Flashcards
New brain anatomy words
Virchow Robin spaces: Invaginations of pia mater due to the arteries
Tentorial notch: where the brain stem comes out
Where is CSF produced
In the choroid plexus, mainly in the lateral ventricles.
Process: ultrafiltration across choroidal capillary endothelium; active secretion by choroidal epithelium
Choroid plexus structure
Is a capillary network surrounded by epithelial cells.
Capillaries are fenestrated
Epithelium have tight junctions and lots of lysosomes, vesicles and a brush border of microvilli
Path of CSF
From choroid plexus in lateral ventricles, to third ventricle, then through cerebral aqueduct to the fourth ventricle, then out to the subarachnoid space in spinal cord and around the brain.
CSF amounts
Not much, 150mL and 15-25mL in the ventricles, most in SAS.
Fairly constant production and turnover 3-4 times per day (can take some, and rapidly replaced)
CSF absorption
In the arachnoid villi and granulations, Hernaitions into the dura, into the lumen of the superior sagittal veins.
Unidirectional bulk flow, and is dependent on the hydrostatic pressure. Passive
Lumbar puncture
Way to sample CSF, usually done at L3/L4 between the vertebra (due to cauda equina and larger space)
CSF composition
WBCs; neutrophils; RBC’s; protein; glucose
WBC's: < 5x10^6 no neutrophils no RBC's protein < 0.45 g/L glucose > 2.5 mmol/L (dependent on blood glucose and metabolism by brain)
CSF changes in disease
Meningitis: increase WBC’s, increase in protein, may or may not decrease glucose. Neck stiffness
Subarachnoid haemorrhage: RBC’s, xanthochromia (yellow tint)
Function of the CSF
Homeostasis: BBB, constant environ for neurons and glia
Protection: cushion
Counters sudden increase in ICP
Functions of the BBB
- Regulates ionic balance in the brain
- Facilitates transport of essential substrates for the brain
- Prevents entry of harmful molecules to the brain
Thus metabolites must be selectively transported across endothelial cells
What does the BBB consist of?
- Specialised endothelial cells (many mitochondria, tight junctions, fewer vesicles, present astrocytic processes)
- Thick basement membranes
- astrocytic processes on capillaries
What are the ways substrates move across the BBB?
Diffusion of lipid soluble things, like oxygen, alcohol etc
AT of things like glucose, amino acids, vitamins
Ion channels
What factors affect the crossing of a substance across the BBB?
Size; lipid solubility; protein binding; ionisation; means of getting across
What are some disease processes targeting the BBB?
- Alteration of tight junctions, making them leaky
- BM disrupted
- astrocyte interactions
- transport mechansim altered
- angiogenesis making leaky capillaries
E.g tumour casuing oedema; meningitis causing BBB breakdown
Measurement of ICP
-Lumbar puncture or pressure reader in the head placed by surgeon
Normal is 65-195 mm of water (5-15 mmHg)
What is the Monro-Kellie doctrine
That there are three components to ICP, brain blood and CSF. If any one of these is to ise, there has to be a decrease of another due to the intracranial volume being fixed by the skull.
If this decrease does not occur, the ICP goes up
What are some compensatory mechanisms to alter an increase in ICP
- CSF shunted to spinal cord
- cerebral veins collapse
- increase in CSF absorption
Causes of ICP
- Increase in brain volume e.g tumour or oedema
- Increase blood volume e.g venous obstruction, loss of autoregulation
- Increase in CSF, hydrocephalus due to an obstruction to flow, decreased absorption or increase production
What are Cushing’s signs and what are they a result of?
As a result of ICP, when there is a reduction of blood flow to the medulla, or medullary distortion, you get
- Arterial hypertension
- slow heart rate
- slow resp rate
Cerebral herniations
transtentorial; tonsillar; subfalcine ; upward
As a result of ICP, can displace brain tissue:
- from one intracranial compartment to another
- through the foramen magnum into the spinal cord
Causing compressions of the brain, arteries and cranial nerves
Herniations through the tentorial notch can cause problems with? (transtentorial)
Third cranial nerve, posterior cerebral arteries (midbrain compression)
Cerebrovascular autoregulation and the cranial perfusion pressure.
CPP is?
What happen when autoregulation is lost
CPP is the MAP-ICP, so increased ICP will lower the CPP
Autoregulation maintains cerebral blood flow over a wide range of CPP’s (60-150) by use of vasoactive substances on small cerebral arteries
When this is lost, cerebral blood flow becomes proportional to the CPP, so at lower BP’s, the CPP is lower than normal, it is not tightly regulated so th brain is hyperperfused. (diagram in slides)
Can happen in stroke
Ways to alter the ICP (increase)
Increase venous pressure; increase intrathoracic pressure; arterial blood pressure; posture (lying will increase venous pressure); increase PaCO2 will increase CBF, increasing ICP; decrease in O2; increase temperature increases CBF
if you want to lower ICP opposite of these