The intracranial pressure, measured as the  ventricular fluid pressure (VFP), was recorded continuously during  about 2 days via a cannula inserted into the left lateral ventricle of  the brain of conscious rabbits. The effect of bilateral removal of the  superior cervical ganglia on the VFP was studied at various time-periods  after operation, and the results were compared with those from  unoperated control animals. The pressure changes attributed to the  sympathectomy are referred to as the net VFP. The operation ultimately  caused a disappearance of noradrenaline from intracranial sympathetic  nerves. The net VFP was not affected during an 8-hr period of the  recording starting 5–8 hrs after sympathectomy. During the following 35  hrs it was reduced by approximately 25 mm physiological saline followed  by a return to initial or somewhat higher levels. Four days after  sympathectomy the net VFP was significantly increased throughout the  recording period. Two weeks after the operation the pressure had  returned to the same, or even lower level compared with the  non-sympathectomized control animals. The variations in the net VFP at  different time-periods after sympathectomy are considered to reflect  mainly changes in the intracranial vascular bed due to the leakage and  disappearance of the noradrenaline transmitter from the degenerating  nerve terminals followed by denervation supersensitivity. The results  are discussed in terms of a sympathetic influence on the intracranial  pressure mediated through the volume of the intracranial vascular bed,  and/or the cerebrospinal fluid production in the choroid plexuses.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1748-1716.1971.tb05049.x/abstract
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1748-1716.1971.tb05049.x/abstract
 
