Acute Spinal Cord Injury: Monitoring Lumbar Cerebrospinal Fluid Provides Limited Information about the Injury Site

In some centers, monitoring lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is used to guide management of patients with acute traumatic spinal cord injuries (TSCI) and draining lumbar CSF to improve spinal cord perfusion. Here, we investigate whether the lumbar CSF provides accurate information about the injury s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurotrauma 2020-05, Vol.37 (9), p.1156-1164
Hauptverfasser: Hogg, Florence R A, Gallagher, Mathew J, Kearney, Siobhan, Zoumprouli, Argyro, Papadopoulos, Marios C, Saadoun, Samira
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In some centers, monitoring lumbar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is used to guide management of patients with acute traumatic spinal cord injuries (TSCI) and draining lumbar CSF to improve spinal cord perfusion. Here, we investigate whether the lumbar CSF provides accurate information about the injury site and the effect of draining lumbar CSF on injury site perfusion. In 13 TSCI patients, we simultaneously monitored lumbar CSF pressure (CSFP) and intraspinal pressure (ISP) from the injury site. Using CSFP or ISP, we computed spinal cord perfusion pressure (SCPP), vascular pressure reactivity index (sPRx) and optimum SCPP (SCPP ). We also assessed the effect on ISP of draining 10 mL CSF. Metabolites at the injury site were compared with metabolites in the lumbar CSF. We found that ISP was pulsatile, but CSFP had low pulse pressure and was non-pulsatile 21% of the time. There was weak or no correlation between CSFP versus ISP (  = -0.11), SCPP versus SCPP (  = 0.39), and sPRx versus (  = 0.45). CSF drainage caused no significant change in ISP in 7/12 patients and a significant drop of
ISSN:0897-7151
1557-9042
DOI:10.1089/neu.2019.6789