This study will test the use of video ophthalmoscope to provide information about intracranial pressure without the use of invasive methods, anesthesia or contact with the eye.
The monitoring of intracranial pressure (ICP) is crucial in head injuries and pathologies such as brain edema, arachnoid cyst, craniosynostosis or, in very-low-birthweight infants, post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus. Some current methods of ICP are invasive and, in the case of lumbar puncture, require anesthesia, which can distort the measurement by 5-10 mmHg. The golden clinical standard is direct measurement using a surgically-implanted intraventricular drain connected to an external pressure transducer ("ICP probe"). However, this method carries risks such as hemorrhage, malfunction, obstruction or infection . The risk in pediatric patients is up to 5% and in adults the risk of fatal hemorrhage is 4-5% in patients with subdural and intraparenchymal monitoring devices. Due to these risks and the financial burden on patients, there have been attempts to develop tools for non-invasive ICP estimation. This study will test the use of a video ophthalmoscope that will calculate the relative waveform of intracranial pressure and provide information about intracranial compliance without the use of anesthesia, invasive methods or contact with the eye.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
90
Use of a custom video ophthalmoscope with either a CCD or CMOS camera lens. The healthy controls group (first 20 subjects) will provide data to help determine which lens might be best for measuring ICP patients (Groups A and B) in the second phase of the study.
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
RECRUITINGThe study will look at whether retinal video-recordings can be used to help estimate intracranial pressure.
This study will help determine whether there could be a less invasive method of monitoring intracranial pressure. It is thought that the use of a video-ophthalmoscope recordings could be utilized to measure intracranial pressure. The outcome measures will be provided as z-scores.
Time frame: Participants in the Healthy Control and Intra-Group Verification arms will be enrolled for one day. Transfer Function Estimation Subjects will be enrolled for up to 14 days.
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