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  #1  
Old Nov 16, 2005, 11:34 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2004
ICP - puzzled

Hi:

Can anyone help me with this contradiction I have encountered, in what happens with ICP pts?

I have learnt that ICP patients hyperventilate (central neurogenic hyperventilation) and this expels CO2, and thus constrict the vessels to make more room for the cranial pressure. And then, I read that the body also responds the opposite - poor CPP will cause increased bp and dilate the vessels. So what really happens? dilation or constriction?

Thanks for any help.

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  #2  
Old Nov 18, 2005, 05:23 PM
Registered User
Join Date: May 2004
Re: ICP - puzzled

Originally Posted by epiphany
Hi:

Can anyone help me with this contradiction I have encountered, in what happens with ICP pts?

I have learnt that ICP patients hyperventilate (central neurogenic hyperventilation) and this expels CO2, and thus constrict the vessels to make more room for the cranial pressure. And then, I read that the body also responds the opposite - poor CPP will cause increased bp and dilate the vessels. So what really happens? dilation or constriction?

Thanks for any help.
Both..... it's a form of feedback loop. The constricted vessels cause a decrease in the CPP which in turn, in an attempt to perfuse itself, the brain centers increase BP and decrease the MAP (widening of the pulse pressures).

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  #3  
Old Nov 18, 2005, 08:22 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Re: ICP - puzzled

ICP Pts?!

Hey Epiphany

Pretty simple idea to get in your head as you analysis of your neuro Pt--that LOW pCO2 is interpreted by the brain as roughly equivalent to HIGH pO2. (Well--they both happen when we hyperventilate don't they?)

So if the CNS has all the oxygen it needs--and it needs a lot!!!--it's happy to share. How does it share? By constricting the carotid/vertibral arteries!!

So if our brain injured Pt (on the vent) needs to have the circulation to his brain diminished....to lower his ICP....we can 'fool' his brain by hyperventilating him (with the vent) to lower his pCO2--and the carotids and vertibrals will somewhat constrict.

There are a few brain-damaged Pts that have 'kausmal' resps on their own--and Neuro ICU nurses tend to say--"he's self-hyperventilating'." I dunno the truth of that---but it seems to 'work' from the nurse's point of view.

If the pt is breathing slowly and very deeply--he probably is getting his pCO2 treated intrinsically and--without obvious pathology--most ICU nurses would just observe this and document the neuro-signs and vital signs that come with it.

Did that answer your question?

Papaw John

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  #4  
Old Nov 21, 2005, 11:57 AM
gwenith's Avatar
Aussie Mod
Join Date: Jul 2002
Re: ICP - puzzled

Hyperventilation only works to vasoconstrict for a short time. After a while the vessles dilate again - this is whay we no longer hyperventilate our patients - we usually "run" them at the low end of normal PCO2. Doing this also allows you to keep the hyperventilation trick up your sleeve in case of sudden ICP rise.

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  #5  
Old Nov 21, 2005, 07:50 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2004
Re: ICP - puzzled

thanks for all your input, and giving me a picture of what's going on.

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  #6  
Old Nov 21, 2005, 11:39 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Re: ICP - puzzled

Hey Gwineth!!!

Gosh, if you look like your logo, girl......

I'm sailing my boat for Australia tomorrow....

Anyhow. You are of course correct, that hyperventilation is a transient way of lowering ICP. I remember several adrenalin-charged nights where I "bagged" my neuro-trauma Pt until the NeuroSurgeon could arrive to put in a ventriculostomy to replace the Camino that had showed the ICP going higher than biology allowed.

Papaw John

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  #7  
Old Nov 29, 2005, 11:07 PM
TNNURSE's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2000
Exclamation Re: ICP - puzzled

Keep in mind hyperventilating a patient is only good for 30 minutes afetr that you are just asking for them to blow off too much co2 and then you have another crisis,,,,,bc ....along with the pco2 being a crisis low your ph and bicarb will adjust also.So hyperventilating will help blow off co2...but it is only safe and effective for 30 minutes.

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  #8  
Old Dec 04, 2005, 12:52 AM
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Re: ICP - puzzled

Hyperventilationaims at keeping the pCO2 down to 30-25 mm Hg so that CBF falls and cerebral blood volume is reduced and thereby reducing the ICP. Prolonged hyperventilation should be avoided and becomes in- effective after about 24 hrs. In addition it causes hypo tension due to decreased venous return . It is claimed a pCO2 under 20 results in ischemia, although there is no experimental proof for the same.
The present trend is to maintain normal ventilation with pCO2 in the range of 30 - 35 mmHg and pO2 of 120 - 140 mmHg. When there is clinical deterioration such as pupillary dilatation or widened pulse pressure, hyperventilation may be instituted (preferably with an Ambu bag) until the ICP comes down.

http://www.thamburaj.com/intracranial_pressure.htm

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  #9  
Old Dec 04, 2005, 01:10 AM
ZASHAGALKA's Avatar
ZASHAGALKA (Male)
Who's John Galt
Join Date: May 2005
Re: ICP - puzzled

And I can remember the days when we used end tidal CO2 monitors to ensure that our CO2 was low enough.

I remember an RT bagging the heck out of a vented head once on the way down for an emergency ventric (old days - now we just do 'em at the bedside) and the neuro surgeon asked 'what the heck are you doing?'

'Blowing off the CO2'

'Well stop!'

But that pt came back on, you guessed it, end tidal CO2 monitoring w/ a high vent rate and parameter orders to keep the CO2 low.

That RT complained about that for years.

LOL.

(But isn't it amazing just how many things we do because it "helps" only to find out years later after much research that we were spitting in the wind. Shoot, look at Swans - we've gone from 'everybody has one' to whenever we get one, some new ICU nurse still needs to be inserviced on them.)

~faith,
Timothy.

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  #10  
Old Dec 20, 2005, 03:57 PM
TNNURSE's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2000
Wink Re: ICP - puzzled

Hindsight here....this patient was vented right? Bc...if not....then he/she is just going to tire soon and will head towards resp failure.Patients cant keep up the pace of tachypnea for long.They are human...and tire out.So hyperventilating? Does it work? yes....Is it a "short term fix?"-yes. Do you have to be very careful..yes...yes you do. You might lower that Pco2...which does result in constriction...but also think beyond that...how is that body going to adjust? If the benefit outweighs the risk...then thats great.Its just a good idea to have a baseline ABG of course to use as your reference of how his/her body is responding.Just a safety thing. You might lower that ICP...but what if you have them so acidotic that your dealing with high lactic acid..low low ph....really way off bicarb and base excess'.Look at the whole scenario..hope this helps.You might lower that ICP..but now he/she is potentially Multisystem organ failure.So...now he/she is neuro intact...but mad as h*** bc he is on dialysis and on a multi organ transplant list.LOL...said in humor but with a very serious undertone..

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