Literature DB >> 7880717

Physiological determination of cerebrovascular reserves and its use in clinical management.

H Yonas1, R R Pindzola.   

Abstract

Cerebrovascular reserve (CVR) can be assessed by measuring the hemodynamic response to a physiological stress such as alteration of blood pressure, increase in tissue acidosis, lowered oxygen supply, increase in metabolic demand, or occlusion of an artery. Failure of the cerebrovascular system to maintain function or normative values of several interrelated hemodynamic variables--cerebral blood flow (CBF), oxygen extraction fraction (OEF), cerebral blood volume (CBV), and cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2),--in response to a stress implies a compromise of the normally robust compensatory mechanisms. The conclusions that are possible from this information depend on the type of stress induced and the technology used to measure the response. Technologies that permit a rapid test-retest format coupled with a physiological stress provide the most direct information about the hemodynamics of cerebrovascular territories. Patients whose cerebral vasculature becomes compromised by any of a broad range of disorders and who, thus, are at increased risk for stroke now can be readily identified based upon evidence of exhausted CVR. Strategies for treating hemodynamically driven disorders also can now be designed based upon such patient-specific CVR information. It is hoped that integration of CVR into the standard clinical assessment of patients with occlusive vascular disorders (OVD) will lead to treatments that focus not only on the previously understood embolic causes of stroke, but also on the often interrelated hemodynamic factors.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 7880717

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cerebrovasc Brain Metab Rev        ISSN: 1040-8827


  10 in total

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Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2017-05-25       Impact factor: 6.200

5.  Patient selection for revascularization procedures in adult Moyamoya disease based on dynamic perfusion computerized tomography with acetazolamide challenge (PCTA).

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8.  Oxygen extraction fraction and acetazolamide reactivity in symptomatic carotid artery disease.

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9.  Importance of Collateralization in Patients With Large Artery Intracranial Occlusive Disease: Long-Term Longitudinal Assessment of Cerebral Hemodynamic Function.

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  10 in total

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