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Radiology, Vol 191, 787-791, Copyright © 1994 by Radiological Society of North America


ARTICLES

Intracranial compliance in infants: evaluation with Doppler US

GA Taylor, MD Phillips, RN Ichord, BS Carson, JA Gates and CS James
Department of Radiology, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD 21287.

PURPOSE: To test graded fontanelle compression during Doppler ultrasound (US) scanning to identify and monitor infants with altered cranial compliance. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An ophthalmodynamometer exerted pressure on the anterior fontanelle during Doppler US scanning of the middle cerebral artery. Sixty examinations were performed in 43 infants--13 full-term and 11 premature healthy control subjects, 10 with increased intracranial volume, and nine with suspected abnormal cranial compliance but without increased intracranial volume. Resistive index (RI) and angle-corrected time-averaged mean velocities (TAV) of blood flow were compared at three different pressures. RESULTS: Baseline RI values in healthy full-term infants were significantly lower than in healthy premature infants and infants with abnormal compliance (P < .05). Values for healthy premature infants and infants with abnormal compliance were indistinguishable (P > .5). Neither RI nor TAV changed significantly in healthy infants, but both changed significantly with compression in infants with abnormal cranial compliance. CONCLUSION: This procedure may be more useful than measurement of RI of the anterior cerebral artery alone to evaluate infants with altered cranial compliance.


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S. J. Westra, M. A. Stotland, J. Lazareff, C. T. M. Anderson, J. W. Sayre, and H. Kawamoto
Perioperative Transcranial Doppler US to Evaluate Intracranial Compliance in Young Children Undergoing Craniosynostosis Repair Surgery
Radiology, March 1, 2001; 218(3): 816 - 823.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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