Intracranial temperature and its normal variation, as well as its response to various pathologic conditions, has become a critical component of monitoring in neurosurgical intensive care. In a prospective clinical study of 54 neurosurgical patients, intracranial pressure, cerebral perfusion pressure, and intraventricular and systemic temperatures were monitored in a neurosurgical intensive care unit. All of our patients' intraventricular temperatures were initially higher than their systemic temperatures. In 11 patients, the intraventricular temperature became lower than the systemic temperature, in a median time of 4.43 hours (range, 4.21-5.18 hours), prior to any changes in intracranial and cerebral perfusion pressures. Reversal of the disassociation between intraventricular and systemic temperatures may be an early marker of patients with a poor prognosis.