92 research outputs found

    Effects of Acute Hypertension on Pial Microcirculation in Rats

    No full text

    Whole blood viscosity and cerebral blood flow.

    No full text

    Stroke, hemodilution, and mortality.

    No full text

    Global Ischemia in Dogs: Cerebrovascular CO 2

    No full text

    Mechanism of cerebral blood flow augmentation by hemodilution in rabbits.

    No full text
    Hemodilution is known to increase cerebral blood flow, but it is not known whether the increase in flow is a direct result of a decrease in viscosity or whether it may be due to compensatory vasodilatation in response to the decrease in oxygen carrying capacity that results from hemodilution. This study is designed to investigate this question. Changes in regional cerebral blood flow were studied in normal and ischemic brains of 15 and 18 rabbits, respectively. In one group of rabbits graded hemodilution was used to reduce arterial oxygen content progressively in stages; in the second group the arterial oxygen content was reduced in similar stages by progressively larger reductions in the concentration of inspired oxygen (hypoxic hypoxia). In the ischemic animals focal ischemia was produced by embolic occlusion of the right middle cerebral artery. In the normal rabbits, hypoxic hypoxia and hemodilution resulted in similar progressive increases in cerebral blood flow as arterial oxygen content fell. In the ischemic animals, there was a significant fall in cerebral blood flow in the ischemic region in all groups after arterial occlusion. Hemodilution resulted in a progressive increase in cerebral blood flow in both ischemic and nonischemic regions. With hypoxic hypoxia, however, cerebral blood flow in the ischemic region showed no increase or a slight decrease. Even though hypoxic hypoxia results in a marked increase in cerebral blood flow in normal brain, it does not significantly change cerebral blood flow in ischemic brain. In contrast, hemodilution resulting in a comparable degree of hypoxemia is capable of significantly increasing cerebral blood flow in ischemic brain. Therefore, the mechanism of blood flow augmentation by hemodilution in ischemic brain is probably related to a direct hemorheologic effect rather than to the resulting hypoxemia

    Hemodilution increases cerebral blood flow in acute ischemic stroke.

    No full text
    corecore