Modelling cerebrovascular reactivity: a novel near-infrared biomarker of cerebral autoregulation?

DavidHighton; JasminaPanovska-Griffiths; ArnabGhosh; IliasTachtsidis; MuradBanaji; ClareElwell; MartinSmith; (2013) Modelling cerebrovascular reactivity: a novel near-infrared biomarker of cerebral autoregulation? Advances in experimental medicine and biology, 765. pp. 87-93. ISSN 0065-2598 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-4989-8_13
Copy

Understanding changes in cerebral oxygenation, haemodynamics and metabolism holds the key to individualised, optimised therapy after acute brain injury. Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) offers the potential for non-invasive, continuous bedside measurement of surrogates for these processes. Interest has grown in applying this technique to interpret cerebrovascular pressure reactivity (CVPR), a surrogate of the brain's ability to autoregulate blood flow. We describe a physiological model-based approach to NIRS interpretation which predicts autoregulatory efficiency from a model parameter k_aut. Data from three critically brain-injured patients exhibiting a change in CVPR were investigated. An optimal value for k_aut was determined to minimise the difference between measured and simulated outputs. Optimal values for k_aut appropriately tracked changes in CVPR under most circumstances. Further development of this technique could be used to track CVPR providing targets for individualised management of patients with altered vascular reactivity, minimising secondary neurological insults.



picture_as_pdf
AdvExpMedBiol-765-087.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download

Explore Further

Read more research from the creator(s):

Find work associated with the faculties and division(s):

Find work associated with the research centre(s):

Find work from this publication:

Find other related resources: