Intracranial Pressure (ICP) and Monroe-Kellie Hypothesis

 

1. Intracranial Pressure (ICP)

Intracranial pressure (ICP) is the pressure exerted by the contents of the skull on the brain tissue, blood, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).

Normal ICP Values

• Adults: 5-15 mmHg

• Children: 3-7 mmHg

• Neonates: 1.5-6 mmHg

• Critical ICP: > 20-25 mmHg Requires intervention

 

ICP Measurement Sites

• Intraventricular catheter (EVD) – Gold standard

• Subdural bolt/sensor – Less invasive

• Parenchymal probe – Direct brain tissue measurement

• Epidural or subdural catheter – Less accurate

 

2. Monroe-Kellie Hypothesis

The Monroe-Kellie doctrine states that the total volume inside the skull is constant, as the skull is a rigid, non-expandable structure.

• It consists of three main components:

1. Brain parenchyma (~80%)

2. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (~10%)

3. Blood (cerebral blood volume – CBV) (~10%)

 

• If one component increases, another must decrease to maintain normal ICP.

• Failure of compensation leads to raised ICP brain herniation death.

Compensatory Mechanisms

1. CSF Regulation

CSF production (choroid plexus)

CSF absorption (arachnoid granulations)

• CSF shifts to spinal subarachnoid space

2. Cerebral Blood Volume Regulation

• Vasoconstriction to blood volume

• Increased venous outflow

3. Brain Tissue Compliance

• Only minimal compensation possible

 

Once compensatory mechanisms fail ICP rises rapidly herniation risk.

 

3. Causes of Raised ICP

A. Increased Brain Volume (Cerebral Edema)

• Vasogenic edema: BBB disruption (tumors, infections, trauma)

Cytotoxic edema: Cellular swelling (stroke, hypoxia)

• Interstitial edema: CSF accumulation (hydrocephalus)

 

B. Increased Blood Volume

• Hypercapnia ( CO₂) Cerebral vasodilation

• Venous outflow obstruction (Jugular vein compression, head-down position)

• Hyperemia (Seizures, hyperthermia)

 

C. Increased CSF Volume (Hydrocephalus)

• Obstruction of CSF flow (Aqueductal stenosis, tumors)

• Decreased absorption (Meningitis, SAH, venous pressure)

• Overproduction (Choroid plexus tumors)

 

D. Space-Occupying Lesions (SOLs)

• Tumors, hemorrhage (SDH, EDH, SAH, ICH), abscess, cysts

 

4. Clinical Features of Raised ICP

A. Symptoms

• Headache – Worse in the morning, aggravated by Valsalva

• Vomiting – Often without nausea (projectile)

• Altered consciousness – Confusion, drowsiness coma

• Seizures

• Diplopia (CN VI palsy) – Due to brainstem compression

 

B. Signs

• Cushing’s Triad (Late Sign, Brain Herniation)

• Hypertension (widened pulse pressure)

• Bradycardia

• Irregular respiration (Cheyne-Stokes, Biot’s breathing)

• Papilledema (optic disc swelling)

• Pupil changes (fixed, dilated in uncal herniation)

 

5. Management of Raised ICP

A. Immediate Measures (Rescue Therapy)

1. Head elevation (30°-45°) – Promotes venous drainage

2. Airway protection & ventilation

• Target PaCO₂: 30-35 mmHg (controlled hyperventilation)

3. Mannitol (0.25-1 g/kg IV) – Osmotic diuretic

4. Hypertonic saline (3% NaCl, 250 mL over 30 min) – Volume expansion, osmotic effect

5. Sedation & analgesia (Propofol, Dexmedetomidine) – Reduces metabolic demand

6. Neuromuscular blockade (Rocuronium, Vecuronium) – Prevents coughing, agitation

7. CSF drainage (EVD insertion) – Immediate ICP relief

Mannitol vs. Hypertonic Saline for Brain Relaxation

1. Introduction

Brain relaxation is crucial in neurosurgery and neurocritical care to reduce intracranial pressure (ICP) and improve cerebral perfusion. The two most commonly used hyperosmolar agents are mannitol and hypertonic saline (HTS).

2. Mechanism of Action

Agent

Mechanism of Action

Additional Effects

Mannitol (20%)

Osmotic diuretic → creates an osmotic gradient → draws water out from brain parenchyma into intravascular space

Free radical scavenger, transient vasodilation, increased urine output

Hypertonic Saline (3%, 5%, 7.5%, 23.4%)

Induces osmotic shift → reduces brain edema, restores intravascular volume

Improves blood rheology, stabilizes cell membranes, enhances cardiac output

3. Comparison: Mannitol vs. Hypertonic Saline

Parameter

Mannitol (20%)

Hypertonic Saline (3%–23.4%)

Onset of Action

5-15 min

5-10 min

Duration

4-6 hours

6-8 hours

Effect on ICP

Decreases ICP by osmotic diuresis

Decreases ICP by osmotic shift and volume expansion

Effect on Blood Pressure (BP)

Transient hypotension (due to diuresis)

Increases BP (volume expansion)

Effect on Hemodynamics

Risk of hypovolemia

Expands intravascular volume

Risk of Rebound ICP

Yes (with repeated use)

Less likely

Renal Effects

Risk of AKI (mannitol accumulation, dehydration)

Better tolerated in renal failure

Preferred in Hypotension?

No (causes diuresis)

Yes (volume expansion)

Free Radical Scavenging?

Yes (protects against ischemia-reperfusion injury)

No

Contraindications

AKI, hypovolemia, heart failure, repeated doses

Hypernatremia, heart failure

4. Clinical Use Cases

Scenario

Preferred Agent

Rationale

Acute ICP Crisis (Herniation, trauma, stroke)

Hypertonic Saline

Rapid osmotic effect, hemodynamic stability

Intraoperative Brain Relaxation

Mannitol

Better free radical scavenging, rapid diuresis

Hypovolemic or Hypotensive Patients

Hypertonic Saline

Expands intravascular volume

Severe Hyponatremia

Hypertonic Saline

Corrects sodium and ICP together

Renal Failure

Hypertonic Saline

Mannitol can cause osmotic nephropathy

 B. Definitive Management

• Treat underlying cause (tumor, hemorrhage, infection)

• Surgical decompression (craniotomy, decompressive craniectomy)

 

6. Brain Herniation Syndromes (Life-Threatening ICP Increase)

 

Type

Description

Clinical Features

Uncal Herniation

Medial temporal lobe (uncus) pushes through tentorial notch

– Ipsilateral fixed, dilated pupil (CN III compression) 

– Contralateral hemiparesis 

– Altered consciousness 

– Possible false localizing sign (Kernohan’s notch)

Central (Transtentorial) Herniation

Downward shift of diencephalon/midbrain through tentorial notch

– Small reactive pupils midposition fixed pupils 

– Decorticate decerebrate posturing 

– Respiratory irregularities

Subfalcine (Cingulate) Herniation

Cingulate gyrus displaced under falx cerebri

– Often asymptomatic initially 

– May cause ACA compression leg weakness

Tonsillar Herniation

Cerebellar tonsils herniate through foramen magnum

Life-threatening

– Brainstem compression apnea, bradycardia, coma 

– May cause sudden death

Transcalvarial Herniation

Brain tissue extrudes through skull defect (e.g., post craniectomy)

– Visible brain bulge through surgical site 

– Risk of venous infarction, seizures