Abstract

Intraventricular hemorrhage in its acute stage was investigated both experimentally and clinically with special emphasis on factors that aggravate its prognosis. In an experimental study, two groups of animals, one with blood clots in the ventricle and the other with liquid blood in the ventricle, were compared in terms of pathophysiological and morphological features. The fatal outcome in the experimental dogs was related to the amount of blood injected and its rate of injection. The injection of non-heparinized blood into the ventricle might have a more delaterious effect on the brain than that of heparinized blood. The following factors were shown to play a significant role in deterioration of the existing disease: 1) the amount of hematoma and the rate of blood injection (or speed of bleeding), 2) intraventricular blood clot formation and its extent, 3) disturbance of cerebrospinal fluid circulation, 4) paraventricular tissue damage, 5) the site and extent of intracerebral hematoma and ventricular perforation and 6) the primary disease and age.

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