| Literature DB >> 20167062 |
Adam L Gordon1, Stephen Goode, Olympio D'Souza, Dorothee P Auer, Sunil K Munshi.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cerebral misery perfusion represents a failure of cerebral autoregulation. It is an important differential diagnosis in post-stroke patients presenting with collapses in the presence of haemodynamically significant cerebrovascular stenosis. This is particularly the case when cortical or internal watershed infarcts are present. When this condition occurs, further investigation should be done immediately. CASEEntities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20167062 PMCID: PMC2831909 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-4-54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Pathophysiology of Cerebral Misery Perfusion (Stage 1 to 3 Cerebral Haemodynamic Impairment)
| Stage 1 | Any fall in regional cerebral perfusion pressure (rCPP) is matched by a fall in regional cerebrovascular resistance (rCBR) in order to maintain regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF). This is accommodated by vasodilatation and an attendant increase in regional cerebral blood volume (rCBV). Oxygen extraction factor (OEF) remains constant. |
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| Stage 2 | The capacity for compensatory vasodilatation is exceeded (rCVR becomes a constant) and rCBF therefore drops in tandem with rCPP. To meet their metabolic demands, neurones must "extract more oxygen" from the passing blood - OEF increases. |
| Stage 3 | If rCBF continues to fall to the extent that the brain can no longer compensate by increases in OEF, end-organ dysfunction occurs (TIA). If this situation persists, permanent end-organ damage (stroke) occurs. |
Figure 1Watershed infarcts in the anterior cortical, posterior cortical and internal watershed territories of the left cerebral hemisphere. Magnetic resonance angiogram shows complete occlusion of the left internal carotid artery.
Figure 2Cerebrovascular reserve map of our patient showing left internal carotid artery occlusion and recurrent symptoms. Note the loss of reactivity in the left hemisphere following CO2 inhalation. This is most prominent in the watershed territories.