Decreased blood volume with hypoperfusion during recovery from total cerebral ischaemia in dogs |
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Authors: | Joseph C. LaManna Salvatore A. Romeo Ralph G Crumrine Kimberly A. McCracken |
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Affiliation: | Department of Neurology, University Hospitals and Departments of Neurology and Physiology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA |
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Abstract: | AbstractReversible, total cerebral ischaemia of eight minutes duration was produced in a closed-chest dog model. Before, and at intervals after, this insult regional cerebral blood flow was determined by radiolabelled microsphere injection; and cerebral cortical capillary mean transittime was determined by reflection spectrophotometry. From these two measured parameters, cerebral cortical blood volume was calculated. After one hour of reperfusion following eight minutes of total cerebral ischaemia; cerebral blood flow was half of pre-ischaemic blood flow and mean transit time was increased by half. These results indicate that the delayed hypoperfusion following total cerebral ischaemia is accompanied by a decreased cerebral cortical blood volume mediated by vasconstriction. |
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Keywords: | Regional cerebral blood flow regional cerebral cortical blood volume cerebral cortical capillary mean transit time total cerebral ischaemia |
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