Abstract

Conclusive diagnosis of brain death can be made by the demonstration of prolonged cessation of cerebral blood flow. This report describes a simple method to determine the presence or absence of the blood flow in the brain by recording the pulsatile midline echo on one channel of the electroencephalogram (EEG) or on any four-channel monitoring system in the intensive care unit. A firm transducer holder has been developed to eliminate artifacts caused by transducer motion, The pulsations of the midline echo are assumed to be the result of displacement of the midline structures by the arterial injection of each cardiac systole. Thus, the absence of these midline pulsatile echoes correlates with the absence of cerebral blood flow and, if the absence persists over 30 minutes in the presence of normal blood pressure, then the result is brain death. Twenty-eight cases of clinical brain death with electrocerebral silence of EEG and 18 obtained patients with various types of cerebral pathology were examined by the echo-pulsation technique. Twenty-six of the 28 cases showed no pulsation of the midline echo. The validity of the technique was documented in four cases by four-vessel cerebral angiogram.

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