Objective: To investigate the monitoring effect and application of transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) in patients with severe neurovascular cerebrovascular diseases.
Methods: From December 2016 to October 2018, 96 patients with cerebrovascular disease in Department of Neurology and ICU, West China Hospital, Sichuan University were monitored by bedside TCD, including the detection of bilateral middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) through temporal window, and the detection of the basilar artery (BA) through occipital window, characterized by the peak systolic blood flow velocity, peak diastolic blood flow velocity, average peak blood flow velocity, vascular pulsatility index, vascular pulsatility index, vascular resistance index and blood flow spectrum morphology in local hemodynamic changes. According to the monitoring results, it was divided into vasospasm group, increased blood flow group and insufficient blood supply group. Relevant data of monitoring results were analysed.
Results: Bedside TCD monitoring was successfully used to all cerebrovascular diseases patients. Among 96 patients, 37 patients (38.54%) had increased cerebral blood flow, 15 patients (15.62%) had cerebral vasospasm, and 93 patients had insufficient cerebral blood supply (90.62%, including insufficient blood supply to the MCA and BA). Patients mainly with cerebral aneurysm and hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage types contributed the highest proportion of insufficient blood supply, followed by the increase of blood flow, and the incidence of vasospasm was relatively low. In cerebral aneurysm group and hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage group, and differences in the incidence of insufficient blood supply, increased blood flow, and vasospasm were statistically significant ( <0.05).
Conclusion: The bedside TCD monitoring can assess the patient's craniocerebral hemodynamic information and provide a clinical guidance.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.12182/20200760606 | DOI Listing |
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