Abstract

Acute traumatic neural injury, known as traumatic brain injury (TBI), stands as a significant contributor to global mortality and disability. Ideally, continuously monitoring cerebral compliance/cerebral compensatory reserve would enable timely interventions and avert further substantial deterioration in TBI cases. RAP, defined as the moving Pearson's correlation between intracranial pressure (ICP) pulse amplitude waveform and ICP, has been proposed as a continuously updating index in this context. However, the literature remains scattered and difficult to navigate. Thus, the goal of this scoping review was to comprehensively characterize the literature regarding RAP and its association with (1) other multimodal cerebral physiological monitoring, (2) neuroimaging features, and (3) long-term patient outcomes. We subsequently conducted a systematic scoping review of the human literature to highlight the association of RAP with continuous multimodal monitoring of cerebral physiology, neuroimaging, and patient outcomes in the context of adult TBI patients. Our review encompassed 21 studies focusing on these topics. The primary findings involve meticulous analysis of studies, categorizing findings into three states of RAP to clearly understand its relation to cerebral physiology and clinical outcomes. State 1 signifies a healthy condition with a small positive value near zero (RAP <0.5). Conversely, state 2, a predominant characterization of TBI patients, indicates compromised compensatory reserve, featuring a large positive RAP value (RAP > 0.4). State 3 emerges in worsened conditions, showcasing further compromised compensatory reserve, exhausted cerebrovascular reactivity, and disturbed cerebral autoregulation. A substantial number of patients with fatal outcomes was found in state 3, marked by a notable occurrence of decreasing and, in some instances, negative RAP. The significance of this review lies in establishing a platform for future research directions to enhance the precision and clinical implications of RAP in TBI care, ultimately aiming to prevent the transition from state 2 to state 3 and mitigate fatal outcomes.

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