Publication | Open Access
Cerebral blood flow and edema following carotid occlusion in the gerbil.
155
Citations
22
References
1980
Year
Brain SgBrain CirculationSocial SciencesCerebral Vascular RegulationNeurovascular DiseaseStrokeIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyEdemaNeuropathologyBilateral OcclusionAtherosclerosisCarotid OcclusionCerebral Blood FlowReperfusion InjuryBrain Specific GravityNeurophysiologyNeuroscienceMedicineAnesthesiology
There are 3 sentences. We have content: Purpose, Mechanism: "A technique for measuring focal cerebral blood flow (CBF) and brain specific gravity (SG) in gerbils is described; CO2 reactivity and autoregulation were tested." Findings: multiple lines. Let's combine: mean CBF 29.5 +/- 4.5 ml/100 gm/min, brain SG 1.0500 +/- 0.0004.
A technique for measuring focal cerebral blood flow (CBF) and brain specific gravity (SG) in gerbils is described; CO2 reactivity and autoregulation were tested. The mean CBF was 29.5 +/- 4.5 ml/100 gm/min and brain SG 1.0500 +/- 0.0004. Unilateral carotid occlusion resulted in a reduction of flow to 12.8 +/- 5.8 ml/100 gm/min in the ipsilateral hemisphere with little change in the contraleteral hemisphere; there was also a decrease in brain SG. One hour after occlusion, brain edema, as judged by decreased SG, developed at CBF less than 20 ml/100 gm/min and reached maximal levels at 7 +/- 2 ml/100 gm/min. The amount of edema appeared to be related chiefly to the residual post-occlusion flow. With bilateral occlusion, CBF was close to zero and there was no change in SG, indicating that in the "no flow" situation, there is no edema.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1