Raised Intracranial Pressure Flashcards
Define raised ICP
normal ICP is 7-15 mmHg; upper limit of normal is 20-25 mmHg.
The volume inside the cranium is fixed. This can be mass effect, oedema or obstruction to fluid outflow.
What are the causes/risk factors of raised ICP?
• Space Occupying Lesions:
- Primary or metastatic brain tumours.
- CNS TB
- Brain Abscess
• Head injury
• Haemorrhage (SAH, EDH, SDH, intracerebral, intraventricular).
• Infection: meningitis, encephalitis, brain abscess.
• Hydrocephalus –obstruction to CSF outflow.
• Increased venous pressure: venous sinus thrombosis and congestive heart failure.
• Cerebral oedema.
• Status epilepticus.
• Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension (IIH).
What are the signs and symptoms of raised ICP?
- Trauma
- Headache, worse on coughing and leaning forwards
- Visual Acuity; Peripheral Visual Field Loss
- Neck and shoulder pain
- Papilloedema is an unreliable sign, but venous pulsation at the disc may be absent.
- Vomiting without nausea
- GCS: drowsiness; listlessness, irritability, coma.
- Cushing’s Reflex: Irregular breathing, Systolic Hypertension & wide pulse pressure, bradycardia.
- Cheyne–Stokes respiration: Progressive increase in depth & rate of respiration, then a progressive decrease culminating in apnoea.
- Biot’s respiration: breathing is rapid for a period and then absent for a period, occurs because of injury to the cerebral hemispheres or diencephalon.
- Pupil changes (constriction at first, later dilatation—do not mask these signs by using agents such as tropicamide to dilate the pupil to aid fundoscopy).
- In infants, protruding fontanels may be a sign of raised ICP.
What investigations are carried out for raised ICP?
- Funduscopic – Papilledema – can then do an OCT to measure the retinal nerve fibre layer – papilledema
- Snellen’s acuity testing
- CT/ MRI: to visualise the lesion causing intracranial hypertension.
- LP: To diagnose meningitis and encephalitis; once ICP is reduced.
- LP is contraindicated in raised ICP.
- Bloods: FBC, U&Es, Glucose, Clotting Screen and Blood Culture –results can help identify the underlying cause.