Stroke, Vol 21, 901-907, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
GL Nadasy, JH Greenberg, M Reivich and AG Kovach
Using [14C]iodoantipyrine autoradiography, we measured regional cerebral
blood flow in unanesthetized gerbils subjected to 2 (n = 5) or 30 (n = 6)
minutes of bilateral carotid artery occlusion or 5 (n = 6), 30 (n = 6), or
120 (n = 5) minutes of reflow after 30 minutes of occlusion. Blood
pressure, respiratory rate, and blood gases were recorded, and these and
other gerbils were evaluated with periodic neurologic examinations. Blood
flow to structures above the level of the diencephalon ceased almost
totally during occlusion. The lateral thalamus, the rostral three quarters
of the hypothalamus, and the superior colliculi were also markedly
ischemic. Blood flow to the brainstem and cerebellum was only slightly
affected. After release of the occlusion, blood flow was restored in some
of the affected areas but to levels somewhat below that in eight
sham-operated gerbils. In several areas, principally column-shaped areas in
the cortex as well as patchy areas in other structures, blood flow did not
recover. This inhomogeneous blood flow distribution lasted at least 30
minutes after release of the occlusion. Thereafter, the inhomogeneity
slowly disappeared in such a manner that blood flow to originally well
reperfused areas appeared to decrease while that to poorly reperfused areas
increased. During reflow, blood flow in the brainstem and cerebellum slowly
and continuously decreased. We show that there is an early no-reflow
phenomenon that is inhomogeneous and appears to be of vascular origin and
lasts approximately 30 minutes after release of the occlusion.(ABSTRACT
TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Local cerebral blood flow during and after bilateral carotid artery occlusion in unanesthetized gerbils
Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104- 6063.
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