Impaired autoregulation of cerebral blood flow in an experimental model of traumatic brain injury.

In order to study the pathophysiology and the intracranial hemodynamics of traumatic brain injury, we have developed a modified closed-head injury model of impact-acceleration that expresses several features of severe head injury in humans, including acute and long-lasting intracranial hypertension, diffuse axonal injury, neuronal necrosis, bleeding, and edema. In view of the clinical relevance of impaired autoregulation of cerebral blood flow after traumatic brain injury, and aiming at further characterization of the model, we investigated the autoregulation efficiency 24 h after experimental closed-head injury. Cortical blood flow was continuously monitored with a laser-Doppler flowmeter, and the mean arterial blood pressure was progressively decreased by controlled hemorrhage. Relative laser-Doppler flow was plotted against the corresponding mean arterial blood pressure, and a two-line segmented model was applied to determine the break point and slopes of the autoregulation curves. The slope of the curve at the right hand of the break point was significantly increased in the closed head injury group (0.751 +/- 0.966%/mm Hg versus -0.104 +/- 0.425%/mm Hg,p = 0.028). The break point tended towards higher values in the closed head injury group (62.2 +/- 20.8 mm Hg versus 46.9 +/- 12.7 mm Hg; mean +/- SD, p = 0.198). It is concluded that cerebral autoregulation in this modified closed head injury model is impaired 24 h after traumatic brain injury. This finding, in addition to other characteristic features of severe head injury established earlier in this model, significantly contributes to its clinical relevance.

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