Cristin result ID: 1677831
Last modified: August 6, 2019, 1:17 PM
Year of NVI-reporting: 2018
Result
Academic article
2019

Noninvasive Transorbital Assessment of the Optic Nerve Sheath in Children: Relationship Between Optic Nerve Sheath Diameter, Deformability Index, and Intracranial Pressure

Contributors:
  • Llewellyn Padayachy
  • Reidar Brekken
  • Graham Fieggen and
  • Tormod Selbekk

Journal

Operative Neurosurgery
ISSN 2332-4252
e-ISSN 2332-4260
NVI-level 1

About the result

Academic article
Year of publication: 2019
Published online: 2018
Volume: 16
Issue: 6
Pages: 726 - 733
Open Access

Import sources

Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85066822794

Description Description

Title

Noninvasive Transorbital Assessment of the Optic Nerve Sheath in Children: Relationship Between Optic Nerve Sheath Diameter, Deformability Index, and Intracranial Pressure

Summary

BACKGROUND: Measurement of optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) is a promising technique for noninvasive assessment of intracranial pressure (ICP), but has certain limitations. A recent study showed that the deformability index (DI), a dynamic parameter quantifying the pulsatile nature of the optic nerve sheath, could differentiate between patients with high vs normal ICP. OBJECTIVE: To further evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of the DI, when interpreted together with ONSD. METHODS: This prospective study included children undergoing invasive ICP measurement as part of their clinical management. Ultrasound images of the optic nerve sheath were acquired prior to measuring ICP, the images were further processed to obtain the DI. Patients were dichotomized into high (≥20 mm Hg) or normal ICP groups and compared using the Mann-Whitney U-test. Diagnostic accuracy was described using area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), sensitivity and specificity, correlation between DI, ONSD, and ICP was investigated using linear regression. RESULTS: A total of 28 patients were included (19 high ICP). The DI was lower in the high ICP group (0.105 vs 0.28, P = .001). AUC was 0.87, and a cut-off value of DI ≤ 0.185 demonstrated sensitivity of 89.5% and specificity of 88.9%. Diagnostic accuracy improved when combining DI with ONSD (AUC 0.98, sensitivity 94.7%, specificity 88.9%) and correlation with ICP improved when combined analysis of DI and ONSD was performed (Pearson correlation coefficient: 0.82 vs 0.42, respectively, P = .012). CONCLUSION: The DI was significantly lower for patients with high vs normal ICP. This relationship improved further when the DI and ONSD were interpreted together.

Contributors

Llewellyn Padayachy

  • Affiliation:
    Author
    at University of Cape Town

Reidar Brekken

  • Affiliation:
    Author
    at Health Research at SINTEF

Graham Fieggen

  • Affiliation:
    Author
    at University of Cape Town

Tormod Selbekk

  • Affiliation:
    Author
    at Health Research at SINTEF
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