ICP & CPP - Pressure Cooker Brain
- Intracranial Pressure (ICP): Pressure within the cranium. Normal: 5-15 mmHg. Pathological: >20 mmHg.
- Monro-Kellie Doctrine: Skull is a rigid box (Brain 80%, Blood 10%, CSF 10%). ↑ one component → ↑ICP if others don't compensate.
- Signs of ↑ICP: Headache, vomiting, papilledema, Cushing's Triad.
- Cerebral Perfusion Pressure (CPP): $CPP = MAP - ICP$. Essential for brain oxygenation.
- Target: 60-70 mmHg. Ischemia risk if <50 mmHg.
- Autoregulation maintains CBF if MAP 50-150 mmHg (impaired in injury).
- Management of ↑ICP:
- Tier 0: Head elevation (30°), neck neutral, analgesia/sedation.
- Tier 1: Osmotherapy (Mannitol, hypertonic saline), EVD (CSF drainage), PaCO2 30-35 mmHg (transient).

⭐ CPP is a critical determinant of outcome in TBI; maintaining CPP >60 mmHg is a primary goal.
Acute Stroke - Brain Attack Battle
- "Time is Brain": Rapid recognition & treatment crucial.
- 📌 FAST: Face drooping, Arm weakness, Speech difficulty, Time to call.
- Initial: ABCs, Glucose check. Non-contrast CT (NCCT) head STAT to exclude hemorrhage.
- Ischemic Stroke (NCCT no bleed):
- NIHSS score assesses severity.
- IV Alteplase (tPA): Window <4.5 hrs from symptom onset. Dose: 0.9 mg/kg (max 90mg).
- BP goal pre-tPA: <185/110 mmHg; post-tPA: <180/105 mmHg.
- Mechanical Thrombectomy: For Large Vessel Occlusion (LVO), window up to 24 hrs (DAWN/DEFUSE-3 criteria).
- Hemorrhagic Stroke: Manage BP, ICP; reverse anticoagulation. Neurosurgery consult.

⭐ Ischemic penumbra: viable tissue around infarct core; target of reperfusion.
TBI & SCI - Impact Zone Tactics
- TBI Priorities:
- ABCDE, GCS. Airway for GCS ≤8.
- ICP Control: Target <20-22 mmHg. Use head elevation (30°), mannitol/hypertonic saline, sedation.
- Maintain CPP: $CPP = MAP - ICP$; target 50-70 mmHg.
- Prevent secondary injury: Avoid hypotension (SBP <90 mmHg) & hypoxia (PaO2 <60 mmHg).
- SCI Priorities:
- Full spinal immobilization.
- MAP Support: Target >85-90 mmHg for 7 days (cord perfusion).
- Steroids: Methylprednisolone (NASCIS) if <8 hrs post-injury; use is controversial.
- Recognize Shock: Spinal (flaccid, areflexia) vs. Neurogenic (hypotension, bradycardia).
⭐ Cushing's Triad (hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respirations) indicates severely elevated ICP and impending herniation.
Status Epilepticus - Electric Storm Control
-
Definition: Continuous seizure >5 min, OR ≥2 seizures without full recovery of consciousness between episodes.
-
Goals: Rapidly terminate seizure, prevent recurrence, manage complications, identify and treat underlying cause.
-
Initial Steps: Secure ABCs, administer O2, establish IV access, check glucose, electrolytes.
-
Refractory SE (RSE): Seizure persists despite benzodiazepine + one second-line AED. Continuous EEG needed.
-
Super-Refractory SE (SRSE): SE >24h despite anesthetic therapy or recurs on its withdrawal.
⭐ Non-convulsive SE (NCSE) can manifest as prolonged confusion or altered sensorium; maintain high suspicion and use EEG for diagnosis.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Target ICP < 20-22 mmHg & CPP 60-70 mmHg (MAP - ICP).
- Cushing's Triad (bradycardia, hypertension, irregular breathing) signals critical ↑ICP.
- GCS ≤ 8: Intubate; assess eye, verbal, motor responses.
- Status Epilepticus (seizure > 5 min): Benzodiazepines first-line.
- Ischemic Stroke: tPA within 3-4.5 hours if eligible.
- Osmotic Therapy (mannitol, hypertonic saline) for ↑ICP.
- Brain Death: Coma, absent brainstem reflexes, positive apnea test.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app