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Impaired cerebral autoregulation in the newborn lamb during recovery from severe, prolonged hypoxia, combined with carotid artery and jugular vein ligation
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1994
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These findings indicate that cerebral autoregulation is disrupted during the recovery phase from an insult caused by prolonged, severe hypoxia with carotid artery and jugular vein ligation. This insult results in significant differences in right and left hemispheric cerebral blood flow rates when cerebral autoregulation is lost. If these results can be extrapolated to the human state, they may help to explain the role of pre-ECMO hypoxia combined with vessel ligation as a risk factor in cerebral injury in ECMO patients.