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A noninvasive estimation of cerebral perfusion pressure using critical closing pressure.
OBJECT: Cerebral blood flow is associated with cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), which is clinically monitored through arterial blood pressure (ABP) and invasive measurements of intracranial pressure (ICP). Based on critical closing pressure (CrCP), the authors introduce a novel method for a noninvasive estimator of CPP (eCPP). METHODS: Data from 280 head-injured patients with ABP, ICP, and transcranial Doppler ultrasonography measurements were retrospectively examined. CrCP was calculated with a noninvasive version of the cerebrovascular impedance method. The eCPP was refined with a predictive regression model of CrCP-based estimation of ICP from known ICP using data from 232 patients, and validated with data from the remaining 48 patients. RESULTS: Cohort analysis showed eCPP to be correlated with measured CPP (R = 0.851, p < 0.001), with a mean ± SD difference of 4.02 ± 6.01 mm Hg, and 83.3% of the cases with an estimation error below 10 mm Hg. eCPP accurately predicted low CPP (< 70 mm Hg) with an area under the curve of 0.913 (95% CI 0.883-0.944). When each recording session of a patient was assessed individually, eCPP could predict CPP with a 95% CI of the SD for estimating CPP between multiple recording sessions of 1.89-5.01 mm Hg. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, CrCP-based eCPP was strongly correlated with invasive CPP, with sensitivity and specificity for detection of low CPP that show promise for clinical use.G. Varsos is supported by an A. G. Leventis Foundation Scholarship and a Charter Studentship from St. Edmundâs College, Cambridge. Dr. Kolias is supported by a Royal College of Surgeons of England Research Fellowship, a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Academic Clinical Fellowship, and a Raymond and Beverly Sackler Studentship. He also chairs the British Neurosurgical Trainee Research Collaborative, which has been supported with an educational grant from Codman. Dr. Hutchinson is supported by an NIHR Research Professorship, the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, and has been appointed as the Surgical Specialty Lead for Neurosurgery, Royal College of Surgeons of England Clinical Research Initiative. He is a director of Technicam, a manufacturer of cranial access devices for neuromonitoring. He has also received honoraria from Codman. J. Pickardâs research (excluding salary) is supported by the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre and an NIHR Senior Investigator Award. ICM+ Software is licensed by Cambridge Enterprise, Cambridge, UK, and Dr. Czosnyka and Dr. Smielewski have a financial interest in a fraction of the licensing fee. Dr. Czosnyka has also served as a consultant to Codman.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from American Association of Neurological Surgeons via http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2014.10.JNS14613
ILâ4 induces proliferation in prostate cancer PC3 cells under nutrientâdepletion stress through the activation of the JNKâpathway and survivin upâregulation
Interleukin (IL)â4 plays a critical role in the regulation of immune responses and has been detected at high levels in the tumor microenvironment of cancer patients where it correlates with the grade of malignancy. The direct effect of ILâ4 on cancer cells has been associated with increased cell survival; however, its role in cancer cell proliferation and related mechanisms is still unclear. Here it was shown that in a nutrientâdepleted environment, ILâ4 induces proliferation in prostate cancer PC3 cells. In these cells, under nutrientâdepletion stress, ILâ4 activates mitogenâactivated protein kinases (MAPKs), including Erk, p38, and JNK. Using MAPâsignalingâspecific inhibitors, it was shown that ILâ4âinduced proliferation is mediated by JNK activation. In fact, JNKâinhibitorâV (JNKiâV) stunted ILâ4âmediated cell proliferation. Furthermore, it was found that ILâ4 induces survivin upâregulation in nutrientâdepleted cancer cells. Using survivinâshortâhairpinâRNAs (shRNAs), it was demonstrated that in this milieu survivin expression above a threshold limit is critical to the mechanism of ILâ4âmediated proliferation. In addition, the significance of survivin upâregulation in a stressed environment was assessed in prostate cancer mouse xenografts. It was found that survivin knockdown decreases tumor progression in correlation with cancer cell proliferation. Furthermore, under nutrient depletion stress, IL â4 could induce proliferation in cancer cells from multiple origins: MDAâMBâ231 (breast), A253 (head and neck), and SKOVâ3 (ovarian). Overall, these findings suggest that in a tumor microenvironment under stress conditions, ILâ4 triggers a simultaneous activation of the JNKâpathway and the upâregulation of survivin turning on a cancer proliferation mechanism. J. Cell. Biochem. 113: 1569â1580, 2012. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90542/1/24025_ftp.pd
Elevated Diastolic Closing Margin Is Associated with Intraventricular Hemorrhage in Premature Infants.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the diastolic closing margin (DCM), defined as diastolic blood pressure minus critical closing pressure, is associated with the development of early severe intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). STUDY DESIGN: A reanalysis of prospectively collected data was conducted. Premature infants (gestational age 23-31 weeks) receiving mechanical ventilation (n = 185) had âŒ1-hour continuous recordings of umbilical arterial blood pressure, middle cerebral artery cerebral blood flow velocity, and PaCO2 during the first week of life. Models using multivariate generalized linear regression and purposeful selection were used to determine associations with severe IVH. RESULTS: Severe IVH (grades 3-4) was observed in 14.6% of the infants. Irrespective of the model used, Apgar score at 5 minutes and DCM were significantly associated with severe IVH. A clinically relevant 5-mm Hg increase in DCM was associated with a 1.83- to 1.89-fold increased odds of developing severe IVH. CONCLUSION: Elevated DCM was associated with severe IVH, consistent with previous animal data showing that IVH is associated with hyperperfusion. Measurement of DCM may be more useful than blood pressure in defining cerebral perfusion in premature infants.This is the author accepted manuscript. It is currently under an indefinite embargo pending publication by Oxford University Press
Simultaneous occurrence of cerebellar medulloblastoma and pituitary adenoma: A case report
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens
Spinal Cord Perfusion Pressure Correlates with Anal Sphincter Function in a Cohort of Patients with Acute, Severe Traumatic Spinal Cord Injuries.
BACKGROUND: Acute, severe traumatic spinal cord injury often causes fecal incontinence. Currently, there are no treatments to improve anal function after traumatic spinal cord injury. Our study aims to determine whether, after traumatic spinal cord injury, anal function can be improved by interventions in the neuro-intensive care unit to alter the spinal cord perfusion pressure at the injury site. METHODS: We recruited a cohort of patients with acute, severe traumatic spinal cord injuries (American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale grades A-C). They underwent surgical fixation within 72Â h of the injury and insertion of an intrathecal pressure probe at the injury site to monitor intraspinal pressure and compute spinal cord perfusion pressure as mean arterial pressure minus intraspinal pressure. Injury-site monitoring was performed at the neuro-intensive care unit for up to a week after injury. During monitoring, anorectal manometry was also conducted over a range of spinal cord perfusion pressures. RESULTS: Data were collected from 14 patients with consecutive traumatic spinal cord injury aged 22-67Â years. The mean resting anal pressure was 44Â cmH2O, which is considerably lower than the average for healthy patients, previously reported at 99Â cmH2O. Mean resting anal pressure versus spinal cord perfusion pressure had an inverted U-shaped relation (È2â=â0.82), with the highest resting anal pressures being at a spinal cord perfusion pressure of approximately 100Â mmHg. The recto-anal inhibitory reflex (transient relaxation of the internal anal sphincter during rectal distension), which is important for maintaining fecal continence, was present in 90% of attempts at high (90Â mmHg) spinal cord perfusion pressure versus 70% of attempts at low (60Â mmHg) spinal cord perfusion pressure (Pâ<â0.05). During cough, the rise in anal pressure from baseline was 51Â cmH2O at high (86Â mmHg) spinal cord perfusion pressure versus 37Â cmH2O at low (62Â mmHg) spinal cord perfusion pressure (Pâ<â0.0001). During anal squeeze, higher spinal cord perfusion pressure was associated with longer endurance time and spinal cord perfusion pressure of 70-90Â mmHg was associated with stronger squeeze. There were no complications associated with anorectal manometry. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that spinal cord injury causes severe disruption of anal sphincter function. Several key components of anal continence (resting anal pressure, recto-anal inhibitory reflex, and anal pressure during cough and squeeze) markedly improve at higher spinal cord perfusion pressure. Maintaining too high of spinal cord perfusion pressure may worsen anal continence
Neonatal cerebrovascular autoregulation.
Cerebrovascular pressure autoregulation is the physiologic mechanism that holds cerebral blood flow (CBF) relatively constant across changes in cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP). Cerebral vasoreactivity refers to the vasoconstriction and vasodilation that occur during fluctuations in arterial blood pressure (ABP) to maintain autoregulation. These are vital protective mechanisms of the brain. Impairments in pressure autoregulation increase the risk of brain injury and persistent neurologic disability. Autoregulation may be impaired during various neonatal disease states including prematurity, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), intraventricular hemorrhage, congenital cardiac disease, and infants requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Because infants are exquisitely sensitive to changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF), both hypoperfusion and hyperperfusion can cause significant neurologic injury. We will review neonatal pressure autoregulation and autoregulation monitoring techniques with a focus on brain protection. Current clinical therapies have failed to fully prevent permanent brain injuries in neonates. Adjuvant treatments that support and optimize autoregulation may improve neurologic outcomes
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