Stroke, Vol 17, 44-48, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
JP Muizelaar, EP Wei, HA Kontos and DP Becker
There is still considerable controversy regarding the influence of blood
viscosity upon CBF. We have measured CBF with microspheres in 23 cats.
Autoregulation was disturbed in the left caudate nucleus by microsurgical
occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery. Induced hypertension or
hypotension was used and i.v. mannitol (1 g/kg) administered. In all cats
blood viscosity decreased an average of 16% at 15 minutes and, in 16 cats,
increased 10% at 75 minutes post- mannitol. CBF in the right caudate was 79
+/- 6 ml/100g/min, in the left 38 +/- 6 (p less than 0.001). Only minor
changes of CBF occurred in areas with presumed normal autoregulation,
including the right caudate, in conjunction with pressure or viscosity
changes. In the left caudate CBF decreased 21% with hypotension and 18%
with higher viscosity, more than on the right (p less than 0.01 and p less
than 0.2, respectively). CBF increased in the left caudate 56% with
hypertension and 47% with lower viscosity, again much more than on the
right (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.01, respectively). In the other
area which is (nearly) exclusively supplied by the middle cerebral artery
of the cat, i.e., the ectosylvian cortex, results were similar to those in
the caudate nucleus. These results show that viscosity changes must result
in compensatory readjustments of vessel diameter, but that these
adjustments do not occur where autoregulation to pressure changes is known
to be defective. The adjustments to viscosity changes might be called blood
viscosity autoregulation of CBF. We hypothesize that pressure
autoregulation and blood viscosity autoregulation share the same mechanism.
ARTICLES
Cerebral blood flow is regulated by changes in blood pressure and in blood viscosity alike
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