Correlation between spinal cord blood flow and arterial diameter following acute spinal cord injury in rats |
| |
Authors: | T. Ohashi T. Morimoto K. Kawata T. Yamada T. Sakaki |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Department of Neurosurgery, Nara Medical University, Shijo-cho, Kashihara, Japan |
| |
Abstract: | Summary Simultaneous measurements of spinal cord blood flow and arterial diameter at areas adjacent to a site of spinal cord injury were carried out to determine changes in CO2 reactivity and autoregulation. The spinal cord injury was made at T10 level by the epidural clip compression method. A spinal window was drilled at an area either 7 mm caudal or 7 mm rostral to the injury site for the measurement of spinal cord blood flow and arterial diameter at the same time. Spinal cord blood flow was decreased at both spinal windows, especially at the rostral window. Arterial diameter was also decreased significantly at both sites. The ischaemic zone evaluated histologically tended to expand more diffusely in the rostral direction than in the caudal direction.In the pre-injury stage, both CO2 reactivity and autoregulation were present in the spinal cord. Following the clip injury, CO2 reactivity and autoregulation were both impaired in the areas 7 mm adjacent to the impact site. Correlation coefficients suggested that the rostral spinal cord tended to sustain more injury than the caudal spinal cord.The histologically proven spinal cord ischaemia following the injury may have resulted from the decreased arterial diameter and impaired CO2 reactivity and dysautoregulation of the spinal cord. |
| |
Keywords: | Spinal cord injury spinal cord blood flow arterial diameter CO2 reactivity autoregulation |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |