DocumentCode
1759636
Title
Telemetric Intracranial Pressure Monitoring in Blast-Induced Traumatic Brain Injury
Author
Kawoos, Usmah ; Xu Meng ; Shi-Min Huang ; Rosen, Arye ; McCarron, Richard M. ; Chavko, Mikulas
Author_Institution
Dept. of NeuroTrauma, Operational & Undersea Med. Directorate, Naval Med. Res. Center, Silver Spring, MD, USA
Volume
61
Issue
3
fYear
2014
fDate
41699
Firstpage
841
Lastpage
847
Abstract
The long-term monitoring of intracranial pressure (ICP) is important for the management of acute and chronic neuropathological conditions which include head injury, traumatic brain injury, hydrocephalus, etc. In this study, we developed an implantable device for measuring ICP over long periods of time in an animal model of blast-induced brain injury. The performance of the device was first evaluated in vitro and subsequently utilized to measure ICP in rats exposed to blast overpressures. The effects of blast-induced brain injury on ICP were measured for six days. A significant difference was observed between the injured group and the nonexposed control group. ICP in injured animals showed a biphasic transient increase; an immediate increase within the first 1-3 h and a more gradual elevation occurring two days after the blast. The ability to monitor changes of ICP continuously over long periods after brain injury and during the course of treatment may improve the prognosis after injury and can also serve as a tool in determining the therapeutic effectiveness of new drugs.
Keywords
biomedical equipment; biomedical telemetry; brain; drugs; injuries; medical disorders; medical information systems; neurophysiology; patient treatment; ICP measurement; acute neuropathological conditions; animal model; biphasic transient; blast-induced traumatic brain injury; chronic neuropathological conditions; drugs; head injury; hydrocephalus; implantable device; nonexposed control group; patient treatment; prognosis; telemetric intracranial pressure monitoring; time 1 h to 3 h; Animals; Biomedical measurement; Brain injuries; Iterative closest point algorithm; Monitoring; Pressure measurement; Sensors; Blast injury; intracranial pressure (ICP); telemetric monitoring; traumatic brain injury (TBI);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2013.2291239
Filename
6665043
Link To Document