Background: Cerebral autoregulation is a robust regulatory mechanism that stabilizes cerebral blood flow in response to reduced blood pressure, thereby preventing cerebral ischaemia. Scientists have long believed that cerebral autoregulation also stabilizes cerebral blood flow against increases in intracranial pressure, which is another component that determines cerebral perfusion pressure. However, this idea was inconsistent with the complex pathogenesis of normal pressure hydrocephalus, which includes components of chronic cerebral ischaemia due to mild increases in intracranial pressure.

Methods: Twenty-one patients who underwent ventriculoperitoneal shunt surgery for normal pressure hydrocephalus were included in this study. To determine the pressure setting of the Codman-Hakim programmable valve, intracranial pressure was measured after shunt surgery by puncturing the Ommaya reservoir, which formed a closed circuit with the needle and the syringe. Then, intracranial pressure was continuously measured with intermittent infusion of cerebrospinal fluid from the same closed circuit. We also continuously measured oximetry data, such as regional cerebral oxygen saturation derived from near-infrared spectroscopy monitoring. These data were digitized, recorded, and used for calculating intracranial compliance and the relationship between cerebrospinal fluid volume loading and intracranial pressure.

Results: This study demonstrates that in patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus, cerebral venous vascular bed compression induces mild cerebral ischaemia when intracranial pressure is slightly higher than physiological venous pressure. Cerebral venous compression impairs cerebral blood flow by quadratically increasing circulatory resistance according to Poiseuille's law. Furthermore, chronic cerebral ischaemia occurred even at low or normal intracranial pressures when deep and subcortical white matter hyperintensities (DSWMHs) were severe.

Conclusion: The fact that cerebral blood flow impairment begins at very low intracranial pressures indicates that cerebral autoregulation to compensate for reduced venous blood flow is not functioning adequately in NPH. These processes provide a link between impaired cerebrospinal fluid circulation, cerebral autoregulation, and neurological dysfunction, which has been missing in patients with NPH involving small vessel arteriosclerosis. These findings may provide insight into similar conditions, such as normal-tension glaucoma and chronic kidney disease, in which a mild increase in local compartment pressure leads to chronic ischemia in organs protected by autoregulatory mechanisms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12987-024-00608-7DOI Listing

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