Abstract

We compared differences in perfusion computed tomography (PCT)-derived arterial and venous cerebral blood flow (CBF) in moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) as an indication of changes in cerebral venous outflow patterns referenced to arterial inflow. Moderate-to-severe TBI patients (women 53; men 74) underwent PCT and were stratified into 3 groups: I (moderate TBI), II (diffuse severe TBI without surgery), and III (diffuse severe TBI after the surgery). Arterial and venous CBF was measured by PCT in both the middle cerebral arteries (CBFmca) and the upper sagittal sinus (CBFuss). In group I, CBFmca on the left and right sides were significantly correlated with each other (p<0.0001) and with CBFuss (p=0.048). In group II, CBFmca on the left and right sides were also correlated (p<0.0000001) but not with CBFuss. Intracranial pressure reactivity (PRx) and CBFuss were correlated (p=0.00014). In group III, CBFmca on the side of the removed hematoma was not significantly different from the opposite CBFmca (p=0.680) and was not correlated with CBFuss. Conclusions: The increasing severity of TBI is accompanied by an impairment of the correlation between the arterial and venous CBF in the supratentorial vessels suggesting shifting in arterial and venous CBF in severe TBI associated with increased ICP reflected by PRx.

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