University of Cape Town: How neurosurgeons can now look at your brain through your eyes
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Dr Llewellyn Padayachy.
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For
many years scientists have been trying to find a way to measure the pressure in
a patient's brain without having to drill a hole in the person's skull.
Although this remains the most reliable way to measure pressure in the brain,
it is invasive, expensive and comes with the risk of infection and bleeding.
Assessing
pressure inside the brain is an important part of diagnosing certain
neurosurgical conditions. These include brain tumours, cranial deformities,
traumatic brain injury and infection.
Several
years ago ultrasound imaging technology, which uses an ultrasound probe over
the eye, was introduced as a non-invasive method to identify this pressure
using static imaging. Although it allows neurosurgeons to assess most cases of
pressure inside the brain, static ultrasound imaging does not pick up all the
cases.
Our
study, to be published soon, has advanced the current static imaging method.
Our technique involves analysing a short video clip of the back of the eye to
mark pressure in the brain. It is a faster and potentially more accurate way
than the existing technique.
There
are limited statistics about children with neurosurgical disorders in Africa,
but the number of children with hydrocephalus is thought to be quite high.
Hydrocephalus is the result of a build up of fluid pressure which compresses
the brain and causes the skull to enlarge. Untreated, it could result in death.
A
reliable technique to estimate the pressure on the brain therefore needs to be
very accurate.
Using
sound waves to see the brain
The
eye is directly linked to the brain by the optic nerve which sits at the back
of the eyeball. It delivers the visual information collected by the retina to
the brain. The optic nerve sheath is a balloon-shaped structure. As pressure in
the brain builds up, fluid from the brain is forced along this sheath. It
dilates this sheath in the same way that a balloon is inflated.
The
optic pathway therefore allows us to extract important information from the
brain using non-invasive imaging techniques. Recent advances in ultrasound
imaging technology have made it a very appealing tool to assess raised pressure
inside the skull. The use of ultrasound in neurosurgery is most appealing
because it is radiation-free, portable, widely available and relatively cheap.
The
way the technique works is that the ultrasound probe is placed over the closed
eye allowing us to see the deeper optic structures as they connect with the
brain.
The
currently used technique involves a snapshot of the optic nerve sheath. The
width of the sheath is then compared to other clinical and imaging markers to
infer that there was increased pressure in the brain.
How the new technique works
Our
study has several differences from the existing static imaging technique. Aside
from measuring the changes in the diameter of the sheath to indicate increased
pressure, we have developed a dynamic technique that analyses the way the
sheath moves as a result of the person's pulse. This motion was then compared
with intracranial pressure, demonstrating a remarkable consistency.
As an
initial study we performed the ultrasound measurement on a large cohort of
children. Previous studies using the ultrasound technique on children have not
compared it to directly measured pressure in the brain. Diagnosing neurological
disease in children is notoriously difficult because the symptoms are often
quite subtle.
We
also identified certain shortcomings in the current "static imaging"
technique which resulted in limited accuracy, a limitation described in many
other studies.
Although
the static technique takes between two to three minutes to collect all the
images that are needed, our technique could significantly decrease this time to
around 30 seconds to record the information.
It is
also the first study of its kind to be conducted on such a large group of
patients, with significant results.
The
use of non-invasive techniques to measure the pressure inside the brain to
diagnose certain neurological conditions has gained much attention recently.
These include measurement of blood flow to the brain and the pressure in the
ear. But many of these studies have been limited because of inconsistent
accuracy.
Making
it more accessible
Our
goal is to refine the accuracy and improve the simplicity of our technique. By
doing this we hope that assessing the pressure inside the skull using this
modified technique can be performed at a primary health care level.
This
would speed up the diagnosis of raised pressure in the brain associated with
certain neurological disorders.
In a
resource challenged environment like South Africa, where the average child with
a neurological condition is referred to the appropriate centre much later than
they should be, an accurate tool that allows early diagnosis would make a
substantial difference.
From
a neurosurgical perspective, diagnosing increased pressure in the brain earlier
would be a useful marker of underlying neurological disease.
This
simplified yet effective technique has the potential to change the way we
diagnose certain neurological conditions. But more importantly perhaps, this
could possibly be done at the level of primary healthcare facilities, such as
day hospitals and clinics.
This
study is a collaboration between UCT's division of neurosurgery and a leading
Norwegian research institute. It has received a provisional patent.
By
Llewellyn Padayachy, Paediatric neurosurgeon, University of Cape Town.
Read
more - http://www.uct.ac.za/dailynews/?id=9470
