Publication | Closed Access
Studies on Mechanisms of Impairment of Cerebral Circulation Following Ischemia: Effect of Hemodilution and Perfusion Pressure
183
Citations
12
References
1972
Year
Perfusion PressureCerebral CirculationInfusion PressureCerebral Vascular RegulationThrombosisStrokeHematologyIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyAtherosclerosisIschemic SyndromeHealth SciencesVascular BiologyAnesthesiologyCerebral Blood FlowReperfusion InjuryCardiovascular DiseaseIschemic StrokePhysiologyEndothelial DysfunctionHemostasisIncreased Blood ViscosityMedicineCirculatory Impairment
Reperfusion of cerebral vessels is impaired following total cerebral ischemia of more than five minutes; this is possibly the initial factor responsible for neurological sequela. Failure of cellular ion transport mechanisms during ischemia was thought to lead to swelling of endothelial cells and perivascular glia and this, in turn, was thought to be the primary cause of the impairment of recirculation. A method of quantitating this circulatory impairment in rabbits was devised after infusing carbon black into the ischemic cerebral vasculature in a standardized way. The amount of circulatory impairment was shown to be unaffected by heparin, inversely related to the infusion pressure of the carbon black, and greatly reduced by acute hemodilution with saline. This latter observation does not support the theory that cellular swelling is the major cause of the postischemic vascular impairment, but rather implicates changes in the blood itself, possibly erythrocyte aggregation which is responsible for increased blood viscosity in low flow and no flow states.
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