DocumentCode
3569185
Title
Detection of maximal cerebral vasodilation by correlation of arterial and intracranial pressure signals
Author
Daley, M.L. ; Pasupathy, Harikrishnan ; Robertson, James T. ; Leffler, Charles W.
Author_Institution
Memphis State Univ., TN, USA
fYear
1994
Firstpage
243
Abstract
The overall objective of this research is to develop tools which may improve the care of accident victims with severe closed head-injury. With the use of a laboratory model, arterial and intracranial pressure signals were obtained under conditions of intact regulation of cerebral blood flow and massive dilation. During elevated intracranial pressure and intact regulation, positive pressure inhalation appears to briefly occlude venous flow into the cranial sinuses during inspiration. As a result, the intracranial pressure and arterial pressure signals are not similar. In contrast, when maximal dilation causes failure of regulation of cerebral blood flow, the intracranial pressure signal is approximately proportional to the arterial pressure signal. Comparison of the cross-correlation function derived from the intracranial and arterial pressure signals to the autocorrelation function of the arterial signal reveals that the two correlation functions are: 1) different during intact autoregulation; and 2) nearly identical during dilation induced failure of regulation of cerebral blood flow
Keywords
biomechanics; blood pressure measurement; brain; medical signal processing; accident victims care; arterial pressure signals; autocorrelation function; blood flow regulation failure; cross-correlation function; inspiration; intact cerebral blood flow regulation; intracranial pressure signals; maximal cerebral vasodilation detection; positive pressure inhalation; severe closed head-injury; venous flow occlusion; Accidents; Autocorrelation; Biomedical monitoring; Blood flow; Blood pressure; Condition monitoring; Cranial pressure; Laboratories; Neodymium; Shape;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 1994. Engineering Advances: New Opportunities for Biomedical Engineers. Proceedings of the 16th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2050-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.1994.412063
Filename
412063
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