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CEREBROSPINAL FLUID
Dr.Anitha MA BHMS,MD(Hom)
Tutor,Dr.Padiyar Homoeopathic Medical College.Kerala
Cerebrospinal fluid is a modified tissue fluid present in the cerebral
ventricles, spinal canal and subarachnoid spaces thus bathing the entire nervous
system. The central nervous system is devoid of lymphatics. Cerebrospinal fluid
replaces the lymph here.
Character:
It is a clear, colourless, transparent fluid.
Does not coagulate on standing.
Alkaline in reaction.
Contains about 5 lymphocytes per cu.mm.
Specific gravity is 1.004 – 1.006.
Volume – about 150ml in adults.
Pressure – 110 -130 mm H2O
Formation of CSF:
CSF is formed at a rate of approximately 500ml/day, which is about three times
the volume of fluid in the entire nervous system. Two- third or more of this
fluid originates as a secretion from choroids plexus in the fourth ventricle,
mainly in the two lateral ventricles. Additional amount of fluid are secreted by
all the ependymal surface of the ventricles and the arachnoidal membranes and a
small amount comes from the brain itself through the perivascular spaces that
surrounds the blood vessels entering the brain.
Secretion by the choroids plexus depends mainly on the active transport of Na+
ions through the epithelial cells that line the out side of the plexus. The Na+
ions in turn pull along large amount of Cl- ions as it attracts the negative
charges. These two increases the quantity of osmotically active NaCl in CSF,
which then causes almost immediate osmosis of water through the membrane thus
providing the fluid of secretion.
Less important transport process moves small amount of glucose into the CSF and
both K+ and HCO3- ions out of CSF into the capillaries.
Flow of CSF:
It passes out of the fourth ventricle through three small openings, two lateral
foramen of Luschka and a midline foramen of Magendie, entering the cisterna
magna, a large fluid space that leis behind the medulla and beneath the
cerebellum. The cisterna magna is continuous with the subarachnoid space that
surrounds the entire brain and the spinal cord. Almost all CSF then flows
upwards from the cisterna magna through the subarachnoid space surrounding the
cerebrum. From here the fluid flows into multiple arachnoid villi that project
into large sagittal venous sinus and other venous sinuses of the cerebrum.
Finally, the fluid empties into the venous blood into the surface of the villi.
Obstruction to the flow of CSF causes Hydrocephalus; which means excess
of water in the cranial vault. This condition can be divided into two types:
(a) non -communicating - caused by block in the acqueduct of Sylvius, resulting
from atresia before birth in many babies or from a tumour at any age. As fluid
is formed by the chroid plexus the volume of three ventricles increases greatly.
This flattens the brain into a thin shell against the skull. In new born babies
the increased pressure also causes the whole head to swell because the skull
bone still have not fused.
(b) Communicating - caused by block of fluid flow in subarachnoid space around
the basal regions of brain or blockage of arachnoid villi themselves. Fluid
therefore collects both inside the ventricles and outside the brain. In infants
the swelling of head occurs and in older age group the brain is damaged.
Absorption of CSF
The arachnoid villi are microscopic finger like inward projections of the
arachnoidal membrane through the walls of the walls of venous sinuses.
Conglomerates of these villi form macroscopic structures called arachnoidal
granulations that can be seen protruding into the sinuses. The endothelial cells
covering the villi have vesicular holes passing directly through the bodies of
the cells. It has been proposed that these are large enough to allow relatively
free flow of (a) CSF (b) dissolved protein molecules and (c) even particles as
large as red and white blood cells into the venous cells.
Function:
The major function of the CSF is to cushion the brain within its solid vault.
The brain and the CSF have approximately the same specific gravity, so that the
brain simply floats in the fluid. Therefore a blow to the head moves the entire
brain simultaneously, causing no one portion of the brain to be momentarily
contorted by the blow.
Contrecoup: When a blow to the head is extremely severe, it usually does not
damage the brain on the side of the head where the blow is struck but on the
opposite side. This phenomenon is called contrecoup and the reason for this
effect is following: When the blow is struck, the fluid on the struck side is so
incompressible that the skull moves, the fluid pushes the brain at the same time
in unison with the skull. On the opposite side, the sudden movement of the skull
causes the skull to pull away from the brain momentarily because of the brains
inertia, creating a split second a vacuum space in the cranial vault in the area
opposite to the blow. Then, when the skull is no longer being accelerated by the
blow, the vacuum suddenly collapses and the brain strikes the inner surface of
the skull. Because of this effect the damage to the brain of a boxer usually
does not occur in the frontal regions where he is struck most often but in the
occipital brain visual regions, often leading to partial blindness.
The perivascular space and the
CSF function as the lymphatic system of the brain. Perivascular space is the
space that lies between the blood vessels and the piamater. A small amount of
protein leaks out of the brain capillaries into the interstitial spaces of the
brain; and as no true lymphatics are present in the brain tissue the protein
leaves the tissue mainly by flowing with the fluid through the perivascular
spaces into the subarachnoid space. Then along with the CSF it is absorbed
through arachnoid villi into larger cerebral veins.
In addition to transporting fluid and proteins, the perivascular spaces
transport extraneous particulate matter out of the brain. For instance, whenever
infection occurs in the brain, dead WBC and other infectious debris are carried
away through the perivascular spaces.
CSF - Pressure
The normal pressure when one is lying in a horizontal position averages 130 ml
of water (10 mm of Hg), although there is a range between 65ml of H2O - 195 ml
of H2O.
Regulation of CSF pressure by arachnoid villi:
The rate of formation is nearly constant. The arachnoid villi function like
"valves" that allow the CSF and its contents to flow readily into the blood of
the venous sinuses while not allowing the blood to flow in the opposite
direction. This action allows the CSF to flow into the blood when pressure is
about 1.5 mm of Hg greater than the pressure of blood in venous sinuses. When
pressure rises higher the valves open more widely.
Conversely in disease state there is dysfunction of valves causing high CSF
pressure.
(1) High CSF pressure in pathological conditions like; brain tumour. Here the
pressure is elevated by decreasing the rate of absorption of CSF into the blood.
For instance if the tumour is above the tentorium it compresses the brain
downward, this causes the restriction of upward flow of CSF through the
subarachnoid space. As a result the CSF pressure below the tentorium can rise to
as much a500ml of water; that is about four times the normal.
(2) In hemorrhage and infection large number of red and white cells suddenly
appears in the CSF and they can cause serious blockage of small channels for
absorption through the arachnoid villi. This raises the pressure to 400 - 600ml
of water.
Measure of CSF - Pressure
The subject lies exactly horizontally on his side so that the spinal fluid
pressure is equal to the pressure in the cranial vault. A spinal needle is then
inserted into the lumbar spinal canal below the lower end of the cord and is
connected to a glass tube. The spinal fluid is allowed to rise in the tube as
high as it will. If it rises to a level 136ml above the level of the needle, the
pressure is said to be 136ml of H2O pressure or by dividing this by 13.6 which
is specific gravity of Hg, that is about 10mm of Hg.
Effect of high CSF pressure on optic disc:
The dura of the brain extends as a sheath around the optic nerve and then
connects with the sclera of the eye. When pressure rises in the CSF system, it
also raises in the optic nerve sheath. The retinal artery and vein pierce this
sheath a few millimeters behind the eye and then passes with the optic nerve
into the eye itself. The high pressure in the optic sheath pushes fluid along
optic nerve fibres into interior of the eye ball. The pressure in the sheath
also impedes the flow of blood in the retinal vein, there by increasing the
retinal capillary pressure through out the eye which results in additional
retinal oedema. The tissue of the disc are more distensible and it swells –
Papilledema.
Blood - Cerebrospinal Fluid Barriers
Many large molecular substances hardly pass at all from the blood into the CSF
or into the interstitial fluids of the brain even though theses same substances
pass readily into the usual interstitial fluids of the body. Therefore it is
said that barriers like blood - cerebrospinal fluid barrier and blood - brain
barriers exist between blood and CSF and the brain fluid respectively. These
barriers exist both at the choroids plexus and at the tissue capillary membranes
in essentially all areas of the brain parenchyma except in some areas of the
hypothalamus, pineal gland and area prostema, where substances diffuse with ease
into the tissue spaces. The ease of this diffusion in these areas is important
because they have sensory receptors that responds to specific changes in the
body fluids, such as changes in osmotically and glucose concentration; these
responses provide the signals for nervous and hormonal feedback regulation of
each of these factors.
In
general, the blood – cerebrospinal fluid and the blood-brain barriers are highly
permeable to water, carbon dioxide, oxygen, and most lipid soluble substances
such as alcohol and anesthetics; slightly permeable to the electrolytes such as
sodium, chloride and potassium; and almost totally impermeable to plasma
proteins and most non lipid soluble large organic molecules. There fore the,
blood-cerebrospinal fluid and blood-brain barriers often make it impossible to
achieve effective concentration of therapeutic drugs, such as protein antibodies
and non lipid soluble drugs, in the cerebrospinal fluid or parenchyma of the
brain. The cause of low
permeability of the blood- cerebrospinal fluid and blood- brain barriers is the
manner in which the endothelial cells of the capillaries in the barriers are
joined to one another. They are joined by so called tight junctions. That is,
the membranes of the adjacent endothelial cells are tightly fused with one
another rather than having extensive slit pores between them as is the case in
most other capillaries of the body.
Brain Oedema
One of the most serious complication of abnormal cerebral fluid dynamics is the
development of brain oedema. Because the brain is encased in a solid vault, the
accumulation of extra oedema fluid compresses the blood vessels, often causing
seriously decreased blood flow and destruction of brain tissue.
The usual cause of brain oedema is either greately increased capillary pressure
or damage to the capillary wall that makes the wall leaky to fluid. A very
common cause of brain compression in which the brain tissues and capillaries are
traumatized so that capillary fluid leaks into the traumatized tissues.
Once brain oedema begins it often
initiates two vicious circles because of the following positive feed backs: (1)
oedema compresses the vasculature. This in turn decreases the blood flow and
causes brain ischemia. The ischemia in turn causes arteriolar dilatation with
stiil further increase in capillary pressure. The increased capillary pressure
then causes more oedema fluid, so that the oedema becomes progressively worse.
(2) the decreased blood flow also decrease the oxygen delivery. This increases
the permeability of the capillaries, allowing more fluid leakage. It alsoturns
off the sodium pumps of the neuronal tissue cells, thus allowing these cells to
swell in addition.
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