Objective: The clinical management of several neurological disorders benefits from the assessment of intracranial pressure and craniospinal compliance. However, the associated procedures are invasive in nature. Here, we aimed to… Click to show full abstract
Objective: The clinical management of several neurological disorders benefits from the assessment of intracranial pressure and craniospinal compliance. However, the associated procedures are invasive in nature. Here, we aimed to assess whether naturally occurring periodic changes in the dielectric properties of the head could serve as the basis for deriving surrogates of craniospinal compliance noninvasively. Methods: We designed a device and electrodes for noninvasive measurement of periodic changes of the dielectric properties of the human head. We characterized the properties of the device-electrode-head system by measurements on healthy volunteers, by computational modeling, and by electromechanical modeling. We then performed hyperventilation testing to assess whether the measured signal is of intracranial origin. Results: Signals obtained with the device on volunteers showed characteristic cardiac and respiratory modulations. Signal oscillations can be attributed primarily to changes in resistive properties of the head during cardiac and respiratory cycles. Reduction of end-tidal CO2, through hyperventilation, resulted in a decrease in the signal amplitude associated with cardiovascular action. Conclusion: Given the higher CO2 reactivity of intracranial vessels compared to extracranial ones, the results of hyperventilation testing suggest that the acquired signal is, in part, of intracranial origin. Significance: If confirmed in larger cohorts, our observations suggest that noninvasive capacitive acquisition of changes in the dielectric properties of the head could be used to derive surrogates of craniospinal compliance.
               
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