Background: To maintain adequate perfusion, cerebral blood flow (CBF) is preserved by changes in cerebrovascular resistance (CVR) inversely related to fluctuations in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). It has been hypothesised that during progressive hypotension, a lower limit of cerebral autoregulation (LLCA) is reached beyond which cerebrovascular dilation becomes exhausted and CBF starts to decrease together with BP. We tested this hypothesis by assessing CVR above and below the LLCA.
Methods: Radial arterial pressure, thermodilution cardiac output (CO), and mean middle cerebral artery blood velocity (MCAV) were recorded during sustained intraoperative hypotension clinically needed for off-pump aortic root aneurysm surgery. For each participant, the individual LLCA was determined. Systemic vascular resistance (SVR) and CVR were calculated, and changes below and above the LLCA were assessed with a generalised linear effect models.
Results: For 50 participants undergoing aortic root surgery who met inclusion criteria, LLCA was located at 58 (12) mm Hg, with a corresponding MCAV of 32 (8) cm s and CO of 5.1 (1.2) L min. Above the LLCA, the decline in CVR and SVR were similar, both with 19% per 10 mm Hg decrease in MAP (P<0.001). Below the LLCA, CVR declined at a lower rate (7% per 10 mm Hg), whereas the decrease in SVR was 13% per 10 mm Hg decrease in MAP (both P<0.001).
Conclusions: The continuing decline of CVR below the LLCA indicated that brain vasculature is still able to react on changing BP. This implies that LLCA should not be regarded as a fixed point but rather a transitional zone between exhausted and normally functioning autoregulation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2024.12.037 | DOI Listing |
Introduction: Cerebral haemodynamics is highly compromised in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM). T2DM reduces cerebral blood flow and increases vascular resistance as the duration of the disease increases. Yoga, a holistic method of healing is known to influence cerebral haemodynamics.
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Department of Biomedicine, Aarhus University, Denmark. (L.M.B.H., V.S.D., H.Ø.G., C.S., T.M.P., J.M.K., L.L., V.V.M.).
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School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Life Science, Hubei Key Laboratory of Nanomedicine for Neurodegenerative Disease, Wuhan University of Technology, 122 Luoshi Road, Wuhan 430070, China. Electronic address:
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Cerebral autoregulation (CA) encompasses a series of physiological mechanisms that are necessary to regulate blood flow in the brain. The procedure for CA assessment via the autoregulatory index (ARI) requires the estimate of the critical closing pressure (CrCP). The study aims at investigating the impact of the strategy exploited for CrCP estimation on ARI by comparing three approaches: i) fixed CrCP at 12 mmHg (CrCP12); ii) first harmonic (H1) method applied to waveforms of arterial pressure (AP) and cerebral blood velocity (CBv); iii) 2-point technique using mean and diastolic AP and CBv values (2Pm).
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